Gilani-Manmohan meeting: Pakistan speaks in twin voices
April 26th, 2010 - 7:17 pm ICT by IANS
Islamabad/Thimphu, April 26 (IANS) Pakistan Monday spoke in twin voices on a possible meeting between Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani and his Indian counterpart Manmohan Singh on the sidelines of the SAARC summit at Thimphu. While Gilani said the meeting had not been planned, the foreign office maintained it was possible.
On its part, India said the meeting could not be ruled out.
Addressing reporters in Islamabad before leaving for the Bhutanese capital, Gilani said no meeting had been scheduled with Manmohan Singh during the April 28-29 South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation summit.
However, Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Abdul Basit said the two prime ministers were expected to meet in Thimphu.
Basit added that the schedule for the meeting had not been finalised as yet, Online news agency reported.
He maintained that the meeting would have nothing to do with the 26/11 Mumbai attack that India has blamed on Pakistani terrorists and that efforts were underway to punish those responsible for the carnage.
He said Pakistan always wanted resumption of talks with India, adding that regional security would top the talks agenda if the two prime ministers met.
Basit added that Pakistan wanted a resolution of the Kashmir issue at the earliest.
In Thimphu, Indian External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna Monday said a bilateral meeting between the two prime ministers of India and Pakistan could not be ruled out and stressed that all issues would be discussed if they met.
“I am not ruling it out,” Krishna said when asked if the meeting would take place.
“Let’s wait and watch, how things are going to work out,” he said. “All bilateral issues between India and Pakistan will be discussed as and when the prime ministers meet.”
Krishna, who arrived in Thimphu Monday for the SAARC ministerial meeting, added that since heads of states and governments are going to be under the same roof for the next couple of days for the SAARC summit, a number of bilateral meetings could be held during the period.
Manmohan Singh is set to hold bilateral talks with the leaders of Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal and the Maldives on the sidelines of the eight-nation (SAARC) summit.
If the meeting between Manmohan Singh and Gilani takes place, it will be the first formal summit-level talks between the two leaders since they met at the Egyptian resort Sharm el-Sheikh in July last year.
- Not ruling out Singh-Gilani meeting in Bhutan: Krishna - Apr 26, 2010
- Why Gilani is man of peace for Manmohan - Nov 11, 2011
- PM leaves for SAARC summit, to push for free trade - Nov 09, 2011
- Manmohan, Gilani headed for first talks in months: sources - Apr 26, 2010
- Foreign secretaries meet on agenda for Manmohan-Gilani meeting - Nov 08, 2011
- India wants good relations with Pakistan: Krishna - Apr 29, 2010
- Post 26/11, a chronicle of India-Pakistan meetings - Apr 08, 2012
- Will they, won't they? Ambiguity persists over Manmohan-Gilani meeting - Apr 27, 2010
- PM heads to SAARC summit Wednesday, spotlight on Gilani meeting - Nov 08, 2011
- India did not respond to proposal for PM-level talks: Pakistan - Apr 28, 2010
- 'Solid foundation' laid for India, Pakistan engagement: Krishna - Feb 07, 2011
- Zardari likely to come on 'personal' visit to India (Lead) - Apr 01, 2012
- India happy at 'forward movement in ties with Pakistan - Nov 05, 2011
- Gilani appreciates Indo-Pak dialogue resumption, Manmohan's vision for better ties - Feb 11, 2011
- Manmohan-Gilani meeting delayed by an hour - Apr 29, 2010
Tags: bhutanese, bilateral issues, external affairs minister, foreign office, india and pakistan, indian counterpart, kashmir issue, krishna, manmohan, manmohan singh, ministers of india, pakistani terrorists, prime ministers of india, regional security, saarc summit, south asian association, south asian association for regional cooperation, thimphu, twin voices, yousuf