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Rediff.com  » News » Kashmiris need to be involved in dialogue: Pak minister

Kashmiris need to be involved in dialogue: Pak minister

By Sridhar Krishnaswami in Washington
November 07, 2006 13:14 IST
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India and Pakistan should go beyond confidence building measures and focus on the resolution of the Kashmir issue, a Pakistani minister has said, suggesting demilitarisation of both sides of Jammu and Kashmir.

Pakistan's Minister for Kashmir and Northern Areas Tahir Iqbal voiced confidence that progress in the Indo-Pak peace process will be made after the foreign secretary-level talks scheduled next week and a visit to Islamabad by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

India and Pakistan will have to go beyond the confidence building measures and should concentrate on the 'actual problem,' which is the resolution of the Kashmir issue, he said.

On more than one occasion, Iqbal talked of demilitarization not only of Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) but the whole state.

This could be done in a number of ways, including removing troops from the Line of Control to make the bilateral dialogue of Kashmir fruitful, he told a seminar on 'India-Pakistan Composite Dialogue Process and the Issue of Kashmir,' organised by Kashmir American Council in Washington.

"Demilitarisation will help cross-border movement of people, which will be helpful," he said.

"Overall, the sorting of the problem has not started," Iqbal claimed while calling for an 'out of the box' thinking as suggested by the Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf.

Iqbal said while Pakistan had shown a lot of flexibility, it will not be correct to say that India had not done so.

"It may take a little time, but there will be a resolution of the Kashmir problem. We need to bring them (India) to the table...eventually there will be some solution," he observed.

Iqbal refused to buy a notion that the CBMs have not achieved anything in the bilateral dialogue. "We lost confidence of each other. That's why we had the partition... We need CBMs. They are required. The ice has started melting," he said.

But the bottom line is that the Kashmir problem can be resolved only in a triangular way and the people of Kashmir are the 'most important' side, he said, adding that they 'should be a part of any solution.'

"The Kashmir problem has engaged India and Pakistan for sixty years that included three wars and involvement of the United Nations. Should we wait for another sixty years," the Pakistan minister queried, telling the audience that Kashmir is a nuclear flashpoint.

"Pakistan wants peaceful resolution of the problem," Iqbal maintained, contending that the peace process should not be derailed.
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Sridhar Krishnaswami in Washington
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