March 18, 2016
News
Pakistan formally invites Modi to 19th Saarc summit
* Sartaj Aziz, Sushma Swaraj hold meeting on sidelines of Saarc ministerial meeting in Nepal * Indian FM says Pakistan security team to visit India on 27th
POKHARA: Adviser to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz on Thursday formally extended an invitation to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to attend the Pakistan-hosted 19th SAARC summit which is to be held later this year.
Sartaj handed the invitation over to Indian Minister of External Affairs Sushma Swaraj on the sidelines of the 37th Saarc Council of Ministers Meeting, ANI reported. The two dignitaries then held a one-to-one meeting in the evening, the first after the January 2 terrorist attack on the Pathankot air base. Talking to media after the meeting, Swaraj said a Pakistani joint investigation team probing the Pathankot terror attack will visit India on March 27 and begin work the next day, the Hindustan Times reported.
She said Prime Minister Narendra Modi had accepted Aziz’s invitation to attend the SAARC Summit in Islamabad in November this year. Aziz, meanwhile, expressed hope that Modi and Nawaz will meet in Washington on March 31, on the sidelines of the Nuclear Security Summit. “I hope both prime ministers will meet on March 31,” he said, but went on to add he was not sure if “a structured dialogue between the two leaders will take place.” Earlier on Thursday, the two ministers met over breakfast on the sidelines of the ministers meeting.
Sartaj and Swaraj chatted while sitting next to each other at the breakfast hosted by Nepal’s Deputy Prime Minister Kamal Thapa. They were also seen standing separately and talking informally for a few minutes. On Wednesday night, the two exchanged pleasantries at a dinner hosted by Nepali Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli. The two were seated next to each other and talked at length. Aziz arrived in the Nepalese tourist city of Pokhara on Wednesday, where the SAARC Council of Foreign Ministers is meeting for reviewing the progress made by the regional grouping over the past year and setting direction for the next year.
Upon his arrival in Nepal, Aziz said he is willing to discuss all issues, including the Pathankot attack, with his Indian counterpart. On sidelines of the meeting, the adviser will extend invites for the SAARC summit being hosted by Pakistan this year. There are speculations that the meeting between Aziz and Swaraj could help in scheduling the meeting of the foreign secretaries of the two countries that was agreed in December for deciding the timeline and modalities of the bilateral dialogue, but could not be held because of Pathankot attack.
Pakistan and India had agreed to resume their peace talks under the newly coined phrase of Comprehensive Bilateral Dialogue during Swaraj’s visit to Islamabad for attending the Heart of Asia Conference last year. Diplomats in their private discussions, however, cautioned against raising expectations and said that till now the agenda of Swaraj-Sartaj meeting is limited to delivering the summit invitation, but the two may speak about how to proceed further with the agreed dialogue by overcoming the impasse created by the Pathankot attack.
Meanwhile, Pakistan’s special investigation team probing the attack on Indian airbase in Patkhankot would visit New Delhi on March 27, Swaraj said. “We discussed issues pertaining to the Pathankot terror strike,” Sushma said in a joint press conference with Aziz after holding bilateral talks on the sidelines of SAARC meeting in Pokhara, Nepal. On the occasion, Sartaj said the meeting with his Indian counterpart was held in a cordial atmosphere. He said the terror attack at Pathankot airbase stalled talks between the two countries, but new developments would yield positive results. The adviser expressed hope that the prime ministers of both Pakistan and India would meet in Washington this year.
Aziz also held meetings with the foreign ministers of Bhutan and Maldives. Later, talking to media, Aziz said Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi are likely to meet on the side-line of Nuclear Security Summit in Washington on the 31st of this month. He said the meeting would certainly produce positive results for both the countries.
Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk
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