Efforts to improve the strained ties between India and Pakistan will fail if Islamabad does not act against terror emanating from its territory, India's external affairs minister warned Friday. S.M. Krishna also said Pakistan should actively pursue new investigative leads and punish the perpetrators of the 2008 Mumbai terror attacks.
He spoke to reporters after returning from a visit to Pakistan and was the most senior Indian official to visit there since the attacks in the Indian financial hub that killed 166 people and which India blames on Pakistan-based militants. Krishna called for ``all out efforts by Pakistan to fulfil its assurance not allow the use of territory of Pakistan for terrorism against India.''
The outcome of his talks Thursday with his Pakistani counterpart, Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi, boiled down to one thing: an agreement to talk again. ``We have made some headway and I have invited the Pakistan foreign minister to visit India'' to carry forward the dialogue, Krishna said.
Ahead of the talks, Indian Home Secretary G.K. Pillai was quoted by an Indian newspaper as saying Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency had orchestrated the Mumbai attacks. Pillai said the information had emerged from the interrogation of David Coleman Headley, an American who pleaded guilty in the US in March to participating in the planning of the attacks. The Pakistani agency has previously denied any involvement in the Mumbai attacks.
Krishna, who met with Pakistan's president, prime minister, and foreign minister, said he had been assured that Islamabad would pursue the leads from Headley to ``bring all the perpetrators of that horrific crime to justice.'' Without commenting specifically on the allegations against the Pakistani intelligence community, however, Qureshi on Thursday took exception to the Indian home secretary speaking at all ahead of the talks, saying it was unhelpful to the peace process.
India has insisted that no real improvement in the relationship can take place until Pakistan demonstrates its determination to crack down on Lashkar-e-Taiba, the militant group allegedly behind the Mumbai attacks. Pakistan has bristled at criticism it is not doing enough, noting it has put seven Mumbai suspects on trial while saying it needs more evidence from Indian investigators.
Qureshi said the two sides had discussed ways to make the trial process more efficient, but noted that Pakistan's judiciary is independent. The US is keen on seeing Pakistan and India resolve their differences, in large part because it would free Pakistan to focus on the growing militancy problem along its border with Afghanistan.
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