The Pak Banker

India 'positively' responds to Pakistan's offer about Jadhav

- ISLAMABAD -APP

India has ' positively' responded to Pakistan's offer for a meeting between convicted Indian spy Kulbhushan Jadhav and his wife, but made a few ' requests', a diplomatic source said on Saturday.

Islamabad last week took New Delhi by surprise by offering a meeting between Jadhav and his wife and it took a week for the latter to respond to the gesture, which Pakistan had said was on humanitari­an grounds and as per "Islamic traditions and jurisprude­nce".

It should be recalled that earlier Islamabad had denied multiple requests from Delhi for consular access to Jadhav and had so far not taken a decision on the visa applicatio­n of Jadhav's mother Avantika, who wanted to visit Pakistan for a meeting with her son.

New Delhi did not make public its response to the offer. The media came to know about it through a tweet by Foreign Office spokesman Dr Mohammad Faisal, who also heads the South Asia directorat­e at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

"Indian Reply to Pakistan's Humanitari­an offer for Commander Jadhav received and is being considered," Dr Faisal tweeted.

No details about the Indian response were, however, released.

A diplomatic source talking to media said one of the requests was that Jadhav's mother be also permitted to meet him.

Jadhav's mother, it should be recalled, had earlier submitted a petition against her son's death sentence and had also pleaded to the federal government to intervene for his release. The source said that the tone of the letter was positive and indicated New Delhi's desire to avail the offer. Jadhav, who was captured by Pakistani security forces on March 3, 2016, in Balochista­n, was sentenced to death by a military tribunal earlier this year for his involvemen­t in terrorism and espionage. His appeals against the conviction have been rejected by the military appellate court and his mercy petition has been lying with Army Chief Gen Qamar Bajwa.

India has challenged Pakistan's refusal to grant consular access to the spy in the Internatio­nal Court of Justice. The ICJ is hearing the case and has restrained the Pakistan government from executing him till it decides the case.

Meanwhile, Directors General of Military Operations ( DGMOs) of India and Pakistan held on Saturday evening an unschedule­d hotline interactio­n over continuing ceasefire violations along the Line of Control.

The hotline conversati­on was requested by Pakistan.

Pakistan's DGMO Maj Gen Sahir Shamshad Mirza protested over targeting of civilian population.

India has violated ceasefire along the LoC over 1,300 times so far this year in which 52 civilians have been killed. Two civilians were killed in truce breaches in Chirikot and Nezapir sectors.

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