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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, July 26, 2001 |
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We are committed to dialogue: Pant
By Amit Baruah
HANOI, JULY 25. The Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission,
Mr. K.C. Pant, today informed the 23-nation ASEAN Regional Forum
(ARF) that India would continue with its quest for good relations
with Pakistan.
As part of a general review of the international situation, and
the expression of interest by some ARF Foreign Ministers, Mr.
Pant, who is attending the meeting in place of the External
Affairs Minister, Mr. Jaswant Singh, gave some details of the
recent discussions in Agra.
``India's approach during the discussions was that a narrow,
segmented and unifocal approach would not work. The benefit of a
wider approach is to broad-base the relationship and make
progress on smaller issues that could help develop mutual trust
and confidence and generate the much required goodwill needed for
tackling some of the more difficult issues,'' Mr. Pant stated.
``We remain steadfast in our commitment to resume the composite
dialogue and the Lahore process with Pakistan. In our future
discussions, we will continue on the basis of the Shimla
Agreement and the Lahore declaration between our two countries,
which is the correct and internationally accepted norm. ``We will
continue our abiding quest for good neighbourly relations with
Pakistan. President (Pervez) Musharraf has extended an invitation
to Prime Minister Vajpayee to visit Pakistan, which has been
accepted. A similar invitation has also been extended to our
External Affairs Minister, which too has been accepted. We will
thus start afresh while maintaining our basic approaches to
Pakistan.''
Appreciating the role played by ARF, he said the ASEAN way of
``dialogue and consensus'' should remain the guiding principle of
the Forum, whose meeting here is being attended by the U.S.
Secretary of State, Mr. Colin Powell, the Chinese Foreign
Minister, Mr. Tang Jiaxuan, and the Japanese Foreign Minister,
Ms. Makiko Tanaka.
``Our participation in the ARF is also consistent with our Look
East policy undertaken a decade ago, as also the closer links we
have strived to build with ASEAN as its full dialogue partner,
and with individual ASEAN member countries,'' he said. (Talking
to Indian reporters, Mr. Pant said he was happy with the ARF
deliberations and added that India's interactions with the region
had grown in the last 10 years. ``We are deeply interested in
deepening and intensifying relations with ASEAN and ARF,'' he
stressed.)
Mr. Pant referred to the menace of international terrorism which
threatens the peace and stability of our region. ``The spread of
the Taliban's ideology of medieval malevolence, obscurantism,
fundamentalism and intolerance has the potential to unleash
violence and divisiveness in other areas.....it is necessary for
all of us to join hands to fight the scourge of international
terrorism. It is also time for the ARF to take up the issue as
part of its discussions on trans-national crime.''
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