Siachen withdrawal tops agenda for talks with Pakistan: India

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India has agreed to discuss the sensitive Siachen issue at the June 11-12 secretary-level meeting with Pakistan, pushing the Sir Creek issue – another flashpoint – way down the agenda.
Observers said the reason for resetting the priorities was that Siachen was a far more complex issue than Sir Creek and any leeway on that front may give Pakistan the domestic leverage necessary to push ahead with the peace process, according to The Hindustan Times. The Siachen glacier is known as the world’s highest battlefield where troops have been deployed at elevations of up to 22,000 feet. Sir Creek, a 96 km disputed strip of water in the Rann of Kutch, divides the Kutch region between Gujarat and Sindh province of Pakistan.
Pakistan wants to know how far India will be flexible on the Siachen issue before revealing its cards on Sir Creek. It was at the insistence of Pakistan that the talks on Sir Creek scheduled in May had to be postponed and the new dates have not yet been decided, the paper said. It said New Delhi was deciphering the confusing signals from across the border, including that of the neighbour backing out of signing the new visa agreement at the last moment. The Siachen troop withdrawal issue gained prominence in Pakistan following a massive avalanche burying a Pakistan Army camp in Siachen on April 7, resulting in the death of 129 soldiers and 11 civilians.
After the incident, President Asif Ali Zardari advocated for troop withdrawal from Siachen during his informal meeting with PM Manmohan Singh in April. The foreign secretary-level meeting is expected to prepare the ground for external affairs minister SM Krishna’s Pakistan tour probably in the third week of July to review the peace process.

1 COMMENT

  1. Pray all Pakistanis and Indians that it works. However, we have to be careful of 'crackpot' extremists on both sides of this unmarried divide. If it works, hurrah! We can have a common connubial border. Salams

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