Hindustan Times (East UP)

{ IMRAN KHAN }

PAKISTAN PM

- Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

India will have to take the first step for improving bilateral relations by addressing Kashmir

NEW DELHI: Pakistan PM made the remarks while addressing the first edition of the Islamabad Security Dialogue, a twoday summit organised by Pakistan’s National Security Division in collaborat­ion with the country’s leading think tanks

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan said on Wednesday that India will have to take the first step for improving bilateral relations by addressing Kashmir, which is the only issue standing in the way of better ties between the two sides.

Khan made the remarks while addressing the first edition of the Islamabad Security Dialogue, a two-day summit organised by Pakistan’s National Security Division in collaborat­ion with the country’s leading think tanks.

These were Khan’s first public comments on relations with India since the Indian and Pakistani armies recommitte­d themselves to the 2003 ceasefire on the LoC in Jammu and Kashmir from the midnight of February 24 – an apparent outcome of behind-the-scenes contacts between the two countries.

“There is one issue that is stopping us [from improving relations] at this time. We will make our efforts but India must take the first step because after August 5, till they take the first step, then unfortunat­ely we cannot move forward,” Khan said, referring to India’s decision on August 5, 2019 to scrap Jammu and Kashmir’s special status and to split the region into two Union Territorie­s.

“Our issue basically is Kashmir and it is the only issue – how we can settle it through dialogue and establish a relationsh­ip as civilised neighbours,” he said, speaking in Urdu.

Khan noted that he had attempted to settle all issues with India after forming government in 2018. “Unfortunat­ely, there was August 5 and that was a big blow and there was a total breakdown between the two countries,” he said.

“We still hope that they [India] give the Kashmiris the rights they were given by the UN Security Council to decide their own lives. It will be as beneficial for India as for Pakistan,” Khan said.

“If there is movement towards the resolution of Kashmir through dialogue, the whole region will change and there will be big benefits to both countries – benefits for India because there is great poverty there. So if poverty is to be removed then our trading and economic ties must be strong and our regional connectivi­ty should increase. India will benefit from being connected to Central Asia,” he added. Khan’s remarks reflected a change from his strident criticism of India and the Narendra Modi government over the past year.

On Monday, foreign secretary Harsh Shringla said the onus is on Pakistan to create a conducive atmosphere for a meaningful dialogue.

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