The Asian Age

Kashmir conclave to avoid seeking talks with Pakistan

Only moderate faces to be part of June talks

- SREEPARNA CHAKRABART­Y

Wary of being branded as “anti-nationals”, Opposition parties have decided to avoid seeking talks with Pakistan as one of the solutions to the Kashmir issue. At a special conclave to be held early in June on Kashmir, only “moderate” faces would be fielded — chief among whom would be former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, former external affairs minister Yashwat Sinha, former Union minister Kamal Morarka, former CIC Wajahat Habibullah and former RAW chief A.S. Dulat.

JD-U Rajya Sabha member Sharad Yadav, who has taken the initiative to get parties on board, met Mr Sinha on Wednesday and a decision was taken not to call for talks with Pakistan so that “the Modi government doesn’t get an opportunit­y to put the antination­al tag on the initiative”, sources told this newspaper.

The aim is to involve civil society more than politician­s and not engage the pro-separatist elements, the sources added. Mr Yadav, who was part of an allparty team that visited Jammu and Kashmir in 2016, has held a wide range of discussion­s with many political leaders and civil society activists, including Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Dr Singh, CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury and CPI leader D. Raja.

He has thrice met Mr Sinha, who headed a team of “concerned citizens” to the Valley.

Sources said the parties may hold an all-party conclave early next month after the birthday celebratio­ns of DMK patriarch Karunanidh­i in Chennai. They said that Dr Farooq Abdullah, who met Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday, has also supported the move to hold an allparty conclave on Kashmir.

 ??  ?? Dr Manmohan Singh
Dr Manmohan Singh

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