Khaleej Times

Sartaj will visit India for talks on Afghanista­n

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islamabad — Pakistan’s top foreign affairs official has said he plans to visit India next month for a regional conference, the first high-profile visit since tensions spiralled between the arch-rivals after a deadly attack on an Indian army base.

Sartaj Aziz, adviser to Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and de facto foreign minister, said he will attend the Heart of Asia conference on Afghanista­n, to be hosted by India in December, “to defuse the tension”.

The conference is scheduled to be held in India on December 3 in Amritsar.

“We want to prove that Pakistan is with the multilater­al process by attending the Heart of Asia Conference as Afghanista­n is our top priority,” Sartaj told reporters in Islamabad on Tuesday.

It was not immediatel­y clear if he would hold any bilateral talks with Indian officials during the visit.

The decision came after months of surging tensions between the nuclear-armed neighbours sparked by a September attack on an Indian army base in disputed Kashmir, which killed 19 soldiers and which New Delhi blames on Pakistan-based militants.

“Unlike India, that had sabotaged Saarc summit in Pakistan by pulling out, Pakistan will respond by participat­ing in the Heart of Asia being held in India,” Sartaj told the media.

“It’s a good opportunit­y to defuse the tension,” PTV quoted Sartaj as saying.

He also said he himself will participat­e in the conference and will not repeat India’s “blunder” where it boycotted South Asian Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n (Saarc) Summit, the report said.

The adviser also said that the US president-elect Donald Trump would deserve Nobel prize if he intervenes and succeeds in resolving the Kashmir issue between Pakistan and India. “Trump would deserve Nobel prize if he helps resolve Kashmir dispute,” he said on a lighter note while responding to a question.

Tensions reached dangerous levels as India claimed it had retaliated to the raid by carrying out “surgical strikes” across the heavily militarise­d border, sparking a furious reaction from Islamabad, which denied the strikes took place.

There have since been repeated outbreaks of cross-border firing, with both sides reporting deaths and injuries including of civilians.

India also sought to isolate Pakistan in the wake of the militant raid, pulling out of a key South Asian summit set to be held in Islamabad in November in a major snub.

Other countries scheduled to attend the South Asian Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n (Saarc) summit followed suit, eventually forcing Islamabad to cancel it entirely.

 ?? sartaj aziz, foreign affairs adviser ??
sartaj aziz, foreign affairs adviser

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