Millennium Post

‘PAK LETTING JADHAV MEET WIFE REFLECTS INDIA'S DIPLOMATIC PROWESS’

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JAMMU: Union minister Jitendra Singh said on Saturday that Pakistan’s decision to allow Kulbhushan Jadhav to meet his wife was a reflection of the efficacy of the Indian diplomatic outreach and its acceptance around the world. “I think this is a compliment to Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This (developmen­t) is certainly a compliment to the efficacy of India’s diplomatic outreach,” he told reporters.

Pakistan’s Foreign Office said yesterday that Jadhav would be allowed to meet his wife on Pakistani soil. The move came months after New Delhi requested Islamabad to allow Jadhav’s mother to meet him on humanitari­an grounds.

Jadhav, a former Indian Navy officer, was sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court in April on charges of spying and terrorism. In May, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) had halted his execution on India’s appeal.

JAMMU: Union minister Jitendra Singh said on Saturday that Pakistan's decision to allow Kulbhushan Jadhav to meet his wife was a reflection of the efficacy of the Indian diplomatic outreach and its acceptance around the world.

"I think this is a compliment to Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This (developmen­t) is certainly a compliment to the efficacy of India's diplomatic outreach," he told reporters.

Pakistan's Foreign Office said on Friday that Jadhav would be allowed to meet his wife on Pakistani soil. The move came months after New Delhi requested Islamabad to allow Jadhav's mother to meet him on humanitari­an grounds.

Jadhav, a former Indian Navy officer, was sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court in April on charges of spying and terrorism. In May, the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) had halted his execution on India's appeal.

"One of the major achievemen­ts of the Modi government on terror from Pakistan and sponsored-terrorism in Kashmir is that India's viewpoint is now gaining more and more acceptance across the world, from even those countries which were earlier hesitant or had their own reasons not to accept it," the minister of state in the Prime Minister's Office said. Replying to a question on separatist­s in the Valley seeking Pakistan's involvemen­t in any dialogue to resolve the Kashmir issue, Singh said the decision to hold talks with the neighbouri­ng country was the prerogativ­e of the external affairs and home ministries.

"None of us has the mandate to decide on that," he said.

However, he said, the separatist­s stand exposed before the Valley's youth, who have decided to become a part of the Indian developmen­t journey. He said 19 young boys and girls qualified for IIT from terror-striken districts of Kashmir this year.

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