Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

EU team in J&K was on private visit: Govt

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

UNION MOS REDDY INFORMED THE HOUSE THAT AN INDIAN MPS DELEGATION WAS NOT ALLOWED TO VISIT J&K FOR SECURITY REASONS

NEW DELHI: A group of European parliament­arians who recently visited Kashmir were on a “private visit” to the country, the government informed Parliament on Wednesday.

“The government of Jammu and Kashmir has reported that a group of 27 Members of European Parl i a ment ( MEPS), who belonged to different political parties, including ruling and opposition parties, paid a private visit to India from October 28, 2019, to November 1, 2019, at the invitation of the Internatio­nal Institute for Non-aligned Studies, a Delhi-based think tank,” Union minister of State for Home G Kishan Reddy said in a written reply in Rajya Sabha.

He also informed the House that an Indian delegation of MPS was not allowed to visit Kashmir due to security concerns.

Opposition parti e s had attacked the government over the EU delegation’s tour of Kashmir after Indian politician­s and MPS were not allowed to travel to the Valley after abrogation of J&K’S special status on August 5.

Reddy was responding to a set of questions that sought to know which institutio­n organised and bore the expenses of this Kashmir tour, and whether the institutio­n that organised it was working as a coordinati­ng institutio­n for the central government. In a separate reply, the minister said such visits promote “deeper” peopleto-people contact.

“Meetings were facilitate­d for the MEPS, as has been done previously on familiaris­ation visits for the visiting members of parliament of different countries. “Further, the MEPS had expressed their desire that they would like to visit Kashmir to understand how terrorism is affecting India and how this has been a challenge for India,” Reddy said. They got a sense of the threat of terrorism and how terrorism poses a threat to India, especially in the Union Territory of J&K, he said. “Such exchanges promote deeper people-to-people contact and ultimately, it feeds into the larger relationsh­ip which any two countries would like to develop,” the minister said.

To another question on whether the Centre has “distracted” from its policy of not allowing any external interventi­on on the J&K issue, Reddy said India’s consistent position has been that issues, if any, with Pakistan are discussed only bilaterall­y. “There is no scope for any third party role or mediation,” the minister said. The team of MEPS was the first foreign delegation to travel to Kashmir after J-K’S special status was revoked.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India