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Strained Indo-Pak ties to stay
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IANS | 11 May, 2023
India taking down Pakistan at the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation
(SCO) meet is indicative of changing diplomatic might of India. India
will not stick to fake goody words any longer. It signals Pakistan about
the need to do more to shed the tag of being a global headache on
terrorism.
Coming soon after the recent Shanghai
Cooperation Council's (SCO) Defence Ministers' Summit in New Delhi,
India last week hosted the Foreign Ministers of the SCO at Goa.
The common thread between these two summits was the tough posturing by India against its two neighbours Pakistan and China.
At the Goa meeting, India's External Affairs Minister (EAM), S. Jaishankar, revealed that India had twice called out China and Pakistan at the summit for violating India's sovereignty through their connectivity projects.
The
statement was made in response to a question on the China-Pakistan
Economic Corridor (CPEC), which runs through Indian territory currently
under Pakistan's illegal occupation.
Earlier, India had sort of
reprimanded the Chinese Defence Minister Li Shangfu at the New Delhi
meeting, on the issue of the stalled talks over the Line of Actual
Control (LAC).
India's critique of Pakistan
Pakistan's
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari was in Goa to represent Pakistan
at the SCO-CFM. A visit, which happened after a 12-year gap.
The last Pakistani Foreign Minister to visit India was Hina Rabbani Khar, when she met her Indian counterpart S.M. Krishna in Delhi in 2011.
However, what soured the atmosphere this time in Goa, was references made by Zardari over Kashmir and Pakistan being a victim of terrorism itself. Though he also called for reviving the stalled talks.
India, in a strongly worded response to Pakistan's overtures for talks, said victims of terrorism do not sit together with perpetrators of terrorism to discuss terror.
Rebutting each of the points made by Zardari, EAM Jaishankar said he (Zardari) was "a promoter, justifier and spokesperson for a terrorism industry which is the mainstay of Pakistan. The tough Indian response came after the news of death of five Indian Army soldiers in a terrorist attack near the Line of Control (LoC) on Friday".
Jaishankar
said Bilawal's suggestion to sit together and talk was "hypocritical"
and said India was feeling "outraged" by the incident.
India's stand on China
Jaishankar had a similar position on China whose readout on the bilateral between him and its Foreign Minister Qin Gang described the situation on the boundary as stable.
Jaishankar said that there is an abnormal position in the border areas. "We have to take the disengagement process forward. I have made it very clear. India- China relations will not be normal if peace and tranquillity in the border areas is disturbed. This message was on the same lines as delivered by the Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh to his Chinese counterpart Li Shangfu, a fortnight ago."
Responding to Zardari's diatribe, Jaishankar said Bilawal's opposition to a G-20 meeting to be held in Kashmir had no basis since Pakistan was not even a member of that grouping.
On
Bilawal's opening address at the SCO conference where he said the issue
of terrorism should not be used to score diplomatic points, the
Minister said: "We are not scoring diplomatic points. We are exposing
Pakistan. As a victim of terrorism, we are authorised to do so. We have
put up with it. It speaks so much about the mindset of that country."
He asked Pakistan to "smell the coffee" regarding its grouse about the abrogation of Article 370 as a violation of international agreements. "370 is history. Sooner the people realise it, the better," Jaishankar said.
Indian response to CPEC
EAM
Jaishankar also took an exception at the mention of CPEC at the SCO
meeting, both by Pakistan and China. And rightly so, as SCO is a
multilateral forum, not a bilateral one and further India's adversarial
stand on the CPEC has been very clear from the beginning, as it passed
through the PoK. India has consistently opposed the Belt and Road
Initiative and CPEC, as these projects violate India's territorial
integrity and sovereignty.
Jaishankar very clearly stated that connectivity is good for progress, but connectivity cannot violate the sovereignty and territorial integrity of nations.
Bilawal's overture
On his part Bilawal Bhutto Zardari blamed India's Kashmir policy for the "frozen peace"
between India and Pakistan. The India-Pakistan relationship soured
significantly after India announced the withdrawal of special powers
from Jammu and Kashmir and the division of the state into two union
territories in August 2019.
India has always maintained that it wants regular neighbourly ties with Pakistan while emphasising that the onus is on Islamabad to create a safe environment for such an engagement.
The tough Indian response to both Pakistan and China, mainly stems from its exhaustion with its neighbours, who in spite of several Indian initiatives to better relations, prefer to stick with their age-old stands on the contentious issues, preferring not to respond positively to any Indian efforts in this regard.
The SCO meet also showed yet again that body language speaks volumes in geopolitics and diplomacy. The distance between the two foreign ministers while posing for photographs was noticeably gaping. However, the cold Indian demeanour, a departure from customary diplomatic niceties, and continuing with its old parroting by the Pakistani Minister were more targeted at their respective domestic audiences.
The Indian leadership in view of the forthcoming elections in Karnataka wanted to be seen as acting tough, while the Pakistani Minister wanted to showcase his ability to rake-up old issues in the backdrop of the economic woes of Pakistan. But overall this posturing does not augurs well for friendly relations between the neighbours in the foreseeable future.
(Asad Mirza is a senior political commentator based in New Delhi. He can be contacted at www.asadmirza.in)
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