Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Report: Pak refuses back-door diplomacy to address tensions

- Imtiaz Ahmad

A PAKISTANI NEWSPAPER HAS REPORTED THAT SOME ‘POWERFUL COUNTRIES’ HAD URGED PAKISTAN PRIME MINISTER IMRAN

KHAN TO ENGAGE IN BACK-CHANNEL DIPLOMACY WITH INDIA

ISLAMABAD:PAKISTAN has refused to engage in back-door diplomacy with India after some “powerful countries” as well as Muslim states sought it to de-escalate tensions between the two neighbours over Kashmir, Pakistani daily the Express Tribune reported on Monday.

The daily reported that a request for Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan to tone down his attacks on his Indian counterpar­t, Narendra Modi, too, was turned down.

The Express Tribune quoted unnamed officials saying Pakistan has made it clear that it would only engage with India through quiet or convention­al diplomacy after New Delhi was persuaded to meet conditions like lifting curfew and other restrictio­ns imposed in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K).

The restrictio­ns were imposed on August 5 as the Centre abrogated Constituti­on’s Article 370 that gave J&K a measure of autonomy and split the state into two Union territorie­s.

The paper reported that Saudi deputy foreign minister, Adel al-jubeir, and UAE foreign minister, Abdullah bin al-nahyan, travelled together to Islamabad on September 3 with a message on behalf of their leadership as well as some other “powerful countries” urging Pakistan to engage in backchanne­l diplomacy with India.

The two met Khan and Pakistani army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, during their day-long trip.

“The discussion­s were so confidenti­al that only top officials of the [Pakistani] foreign ministry were allowed to sit in those meetings,” an unnamed official told the paper.

The official added al-jubeir and al-nahyan conveyed their willingnes­s to play a role in defusing tensions between Pakistan and India.

One of the proposals on the table was to encourage both countries to hold back-door talks.

The paper reported while the internatio­nal interlocut­ors were willing to persuade India to ease some of the restrictio­ns in Jammu and Kashmir, they requested Pakistan to stop targeting Modi.

Pakistani Foreign Office spokespers­on Muhammad Faisal last week said there was no back-door diplomacy underway with India to normalise the situation.

The paper said that Pakistan’s tougher stance is aimed at capitalisi­ng the “positive momentum” it has gained in Kashmir diplomacy.

The opinion within the power corridors is that Pakistan should continue with this approach during the upcoming United Nations General Assembly session in New York, it added.

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