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India-Pakistan peace talks falter

August 22, 2015

Islamabad has declared talks with India "would not serve any purpose" after New Delhi said it wanted to restrict discussions to terrorism. The latest events signal a potential cancelling of scheduled peace negotiations.

https://p.dw.com/p/1GK0l
Pakistani Rangers patrol along the Pakistan-India border area of Wagah on October 16, 2014.
Image: Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images

Pakistan said on Saturday it was unwilling to accept India's "preconditions" for high-level talks between the two countries' National Security Advisors (NSAs). which had been scheduled for Sunday.

"We have come to the conclusion that the proposed NSA level talks between the two countries would not serve any purpose," Pakistan's foreign ministry said in a statement.

"It is not reasonable for India to now assume the right to decide unilaterally that from now onwards, other issues will be discussed after terrorism has been discussed and eliminated," the ministry argued.

Pakistan's NSA Sartaj Aziz blamed the Indian media for creating a controversy out of nothing and said he was "still prepared to go to New Delhi for NSA talks without any preconditions."

Indian officials expressed regret at the developments. Foreign ministry spokesman Vikas Swarup said in a tweet:

Earlier, Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj had India would cancel discussions if Pakistan's NSA Sartaj Aziz met separatists from Kashmir. New Delhi also placed two leaders of the Kashmiri separatist organization Hurriyat under house arrest, when they arrived in the national capital.

Swaraj asked Pakistan to decide by midnight (18:30 UTC Saturday) whether it wanted to participate in a meeting where the agenda would be restricted to discussions of "terror, terror and terror only." She said India was not setting preconditions for talks but only insisting on what was agreed to when Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif in the Russian city Ufa in July.

The discussion had been perceived as a thaw in relations after New Delhi India cancelled talks with its neighbor in 2014.

Pakistan separated from India in 1947 after the end of British colonial rule. The two nuclear powers have fought three wars over Kashmir since then.

mg/se (Reuters, AFP)