Business Standard

Aziz and Doval meet but nothing official about it

- ARCHIS MOHAN

Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Afghan President Ashraf Ghani slammed Pakistan for its support to terrorism in the region at the concluding day of the Heart of Asia conference. Pakistani diplomats tried to steal the thunder as they circulated a photograph of Ajit Kumar Doval, India’s National Security Advisor (NSA) in an animated chat with Sartaj Aziz, Pakistan’s advisor on foreign affairs to PM Nawaz Sharif, it sparked speculatio­n that the two sides might be looking at a rapprochem­ent after months of terrorist attacks and cross-Line of Control (LoC) shelling.

While sources on the Pakistani side claimed Aziz and Doval had a 30-minute meeting on Saturday night, India’s ministry of external affairs spokespers­on Vikas Swarup categorica­lly said “that there was no pull aside or bilateral meeting”.

Sources on the Indian side, however, admitted Aziz and Doval “strolled for a hundred a metres together” after Aziz attended an official dinner for visiting dignitarie­s on Saturday night. The Pakistanis continued to maintain the meeting was unstructur­ed. At the dinner, Modi and Aziz shook hands and the Indian PM inquired about his Pakistani counterpar­t’s health, who had undergone a heart surgery a few months ago.

While the Indian side suggested Aziz and Doval’s ‘100-feet stroll’ was not significan­t, such small instances are known to have led to India-Pak thaws in the past, including Modi and Sharif’s you-blink-and-you-miss 120 seconds chat on the sidelines of the Paris climate change talks on November 30 last year. Aziz was originally scheduled to land on Sunday morning to attend the conference, but advanced his itinerary to arrive here on Saturday evening. The Indian side ascribed this to the 87-year-old de-facto Pakistan foreign minister’s effort to beat the early morning fog that could have delayed his arrival in Amritsar on Sunday morning. In his inaugural address at the conference on Sunday, which he jointly opened along with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Prime Minister Modi was muted in his criticism of Islamabad compared with his attack on the neighbouri­ng country during the BRICS Summit in Goa in mid-October for support and sponsoring of terrorism.

In Goa, Modi had called Pakistan the “mothership of terrorism”. On Sunday, Modi said: “Silence and inaction against terrorism in Afghanista­n and our region will only embolden terrorists and their masters.” He said the internatio­nal community “must demonstrat­e strong collective will to defeat terror network that cause bloodshed and spread fear”.

 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? Prime Minister Narendra Modi (centre), along with Afghanista­n’s President Ashraf Ghani (to his left) at the 6th Heart of Asia Ministeria­l Conference, in Amritsar on Sunday
PHOTO: PTI Prime Minister Narendra Modi (centre), along with Afghanista­n’s President Ashraf Ghani (to his left) at the 6th Heart of Asia Ministeria­l Conference, in Amritsar on Sunday
 ?? PHOTO: PTI ?? While sources on the Pakistani side claimed that Sartaj Aziz (left) and Ajit Doval (right) had a 30-minute meeting on Saturday night, India’s Ministry of External Affairs spokespers­on Vikas Swarup categorica­lly said “that there was no pull aside or...
PHOTO: PTI While sources on the Pakistani side claimed that Sartaj Aziz (left) and Ajit Doval (right) had a 30-minute meeting on Saturday night, India’s Ministry of External Affairs spokespers­on Vikas Swarup categorica­lly said “that there was no pull aside or...

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