Sensitive topics off table as Zardari visits India

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President Asif Ali Zardari will on Sunday become the first head of state since 2005 to visit India when he makes a trip that includes lunch with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
During what officials from both sides describe as a “private” one-day visit, Zardari will be the guest of the Indian premier in New Delhi before heading to an important Muslim shrine in Ajmer to offer prayers.
The trip, which was confirmed this week after leaks in the press, has received a cautious welcome from analysts who say it reflects some improvement in ties since the 2008 Mumbai attacks.
But they warned little progress could be expected on sensitive topics such as Kashmir and militant activity against India that make the cross-border relationship one of the most dangerous in the world.
“Zardari expressed a desire to visit India primarily for a pilgrimage, and it is only correct that we welcome him to the capital,” G Parthasarathy, a retired Indian diplomat and former high commissioner to Pakistan, told AFP.
“There will be talks and I expect the prime minister to raise issues such as our concerns over terrorism. Relations were rock bottom in 2008 so they have improved.”
Zardari’s visit comes shortly after the United States issued a $10 million bounty for Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the founder of LT who lives in Pakistan.
A United States official praised the planned rare talks between India and Pakistan, describing them as a “win-win situation” for the US and said it did not want the bounty “to impact” on Zardari’s visit.
“We’re not playing some sort of strategic game here,” State Department Spokesman Mark Toner said. “We’re just trying to prosecute this individual.”
Brahma Chellaney, an analyst at New Delhi’s Centre for Policy Research, said of the visit: “This is a largely symbolic occasion and contentious subjects will be avoided.”
Pakistan foreign policy is seen as preserve of the powerful military, and Chellaney said Zardari wielded little real power in the country.
“You can’t have substantive talks with someone who doesn’t run anything,” he told AFP.
Trade is one area of discussion that the two leaders may find fruitful as Pakistan moves to normalise trade ties by phasing out major restrictions on Indian imports by the end of the year.
In 1996, India granted Pakistan “most preferred nation” trading status, while Pakistan last year agreed in principle to match the move.
Sources in Islamabad said among the 40 members of Zardari’s family and staff expected to accompany him on the trip will be Interior Minister Rehman Malik, potentially undermining its “private” status.
“Zardari could just go to Ajmer and back home, so meeting Manmohan Singh makes it significant even though it’s not official,” Pakistani political analyst Hasan Askari told AFP.
“This means that relations are in a better state, otherwise the prime minister could ignore the visit.”