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            No trade concession for India under Pak-Afghan deal

·         Spokesman denies Pakistan shared nuclear secrets with US
* Says Swat deal can be salvaged if Taliban lay down arms

By Sajjad Malik


ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will not give any trade concession to India under a Pak-Afghan memorandum of understanding (MoU) signed between the two countries in Washington, said the Foreign Office on Thursday.

“As far as our engagement with India in the context of a transit route for Afghanistan is concerned, it is a separate issue altogether, and will be discussed with India bilaterally and has nothing to do with this MoU,” spokesman Abdul Basit told a weekly briefing. He said the agreement clearly stated that Pakistan and Afghanistan would negotiate to revise the existing Pak-Afghan transit trade agreement of 1965.

Denial: Basit rejected a story by the Boston Globe that claimed Pakistan had shared nuclear secrets with the US, and said details of the nuclear programme were ‘sacrosanct’ and could not be shared with any country. He said that Pakistan’s strategic assets were safe, and concerns over their safety were ‘totally misplaced’.

The spokesman called on India to share all relevant information on the Mumbai terror attacks, to help expedite investigations. He said Islamabad was serious about bringing the perpetrators to justice. He said it was necessary for Pakistan and India to resolve their outstanding disputes, for lasting regional stability and peace.

Basit said the challenges Pakistan was facing were mostly “spillover effects of the 30 years of conflict in Afghanistan, where the Taliban still have large chunks of territory under their control”. He confirmed that the Foreign Ministry had directed all foreign missions to tighten security, and “this has been done on the basis of some intelligence reports”. “Diplomatic corps have been asked to take extra security measures,” he said.

Swat: He said if the Taliban agreed to lay down arms, there was hope of salvaging the Swat peace deal. “The Swat peace deal was always linked to the restoration of peace, and if there is no peace ... there is no deal,” he said.

The spokesman said US drone strikes had been discussed in Washington, and Pakistan hoped that the US would reconsider its policy, because “the people and the government do not see these strikes helping us in any way”.
About the president’s visit to the US, Basit said there was a realisation in Washington over a shift from the “transactional nature of the Pak-US relationship to a long-term, people-centric partnership”.

About Dr Afia Siddiqui, a Pakistani scientist detained in the US on terror charges – he said the Pakistani ambassador in Washington met the US attorney general on April 13 to discuss the matter, and efforts were underway to bring her back to Pakistan.

He said Pakistani students arrested by the UK were still in the custody of that country’s border agency. He said President Asif Ali Zardari would visit Britain on his way back from the US and meet Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

“Our efforts at this stage are focused on preventing their deportation to Pakistan, and we are committed to providing them the legal assistance they require,” he added.

Source: The News International: Friday 08,2009


 

 

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