Zardari avoiding Manmohan?
Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari will not visit Egypt
for the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) summit next month, his spokesman
said, meaning that a planned meeting with Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh will not take place. At the same time, "the
formulation is not correct to say that Zardari had cancelled
the visit as he was avoiding" Manmohan Singh in the wake
of the Indian prime minister's blunt message during their meeting
in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg on Tuesday, presidential
spokesman Farhatullah Babar told the NDTV news channel. Babar,
however, couldn't say whether Zardari was 'upset' or 'irritated',
as the questioner put it, over Manmohan Singh's remark, made
in full view of TV cameras at the first meeting of the two leaders
after the Mumbai terror attacks that India has blamed on elements
operating from Pakistan.
Zardari did not raise Kashmir issue: Manmohan
"I can't comment. I really have no comment," Babar
replied. Manmohan Singh had delivered a blunt message to Zardari
at their meeting: "I must tell you quite frankly that I
have come with the limited mandate of discussing how Pakistan
can deliver on its assurances that its territory would not be
used for terrorist attacks on India." Prime Minister Yousuf
Raza Gilani will represent Pakistan at the NAM summit. Babar
chose to be circumspect when asked whether Gilani would meet
Manmohan Singh on the sidelines of the summit. "The (Manmohan-Zardari)
meeting was to have taken place after the foreign secretaries
had met and reported on the outcome of their talks," he
replied.
PM favours peace with Pakistan After their meeting, it was
announced that the two foreign secretaries would meet, after
which Manmohan Singh and Zardari would again meet in Egypt.
The two leaders were in Yekaterinburg for the Shanghai Cooperation
Organisation (SCO) meeting that they attended as observers.
India froze the composite dialogue process in the wake of the
Nov 26-29, 2008 Mumbai carnage that claimed over 170 lives,
including those of 26 foreigners.
India has repeatedly said the dialogue can resume only after
Pakistan shows tangible results in bringing to justice the perpetrators
of the Mumbai mayhem.