Thursday, November 25, 2010

Dragging ISI into Mumbai attack ridiculous: FO-INDIA SHOULD MOVE BEYOND 26/11/10

NovemberDragging ISI into Mumbai attack ridiculous: FO

By: Kaswar Klasra | Published: 26, 2010

(ITS IMPORTANT FOR PAKISTAN TO ACKNOWLEDGE THAT THEIR GOVERNMENT AGENCY ISI AND OTHER AGENCIES THAT EXISTS IN PAKISTAN,THEIR ROLE IN 26/11/10 AND OTHER SUCH INCIDENTS IN INDIA (AND AFGANISTAN WHICH IS NOT OUR DIRECT CONCERN).AS THERE ARE MUCH EVIDENCE AGAINST THEM,AS REPORTS SAYS!!!AS IF THEY WON'T DO IT,IT MEANS THEY ARE SUPPORTING 'TERRORISM' IN INDIA AND OTHER PARTS OF WORLD,INCLUDING US,UK ETC,AS THEY WERE BLAMED FOR.AND DEFINITLY THEY ARE THEMSELF WORST HIT BY IT,WHICH SEEMS IMPOSSIBLE FOR THEM TO RECOVER FROM!!!THEY MUST THINK AND ACT NOW!!!WE HAVE NOTHING AGAINST PAKISTANWASI'S WHO ALSO WANT 'NIJAAT' FROM TERRORISM AND DISTRUCTIONS IT CAUSES,AND LIVE PEACEFULLY AND HAPPILY!!!.....VIBHA TAILANG)

ISLAMABAD – Pakistan on Thursday made it loud and clear that dragging Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) agency into Mumbai terror attack, in any manner, was not fair rather it was preposterous.
While communicating with journalists during a weekly press briefing, Foreign Office Spokesperson Abdul Basit said a trial against the seven accused in the Mumbai attack is underway and Pakistan is committed to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attack to justice.
The spokesman strongly condemned manhandling of prominent Hurriyat leader Mir Waiz Umar Farooq and said such staged rowdyism against the Hurriyat leadership only shows India’s nervousness at the ongoing peaceful demonstrations and strikes in Indian occupied Kashmir.
“Any effort to belittle or undermine the legitimate struggle for self-determination is bound to fail given the unflinching resolve of the people of Jammu and Kashmir,” the spokesperson said.
Commenting on a statement given by the Indian foreign secretary who said that India does not need any lesion on morals from Pakistan, the spokesperson said the Indian foreign secretary’s reaction to our position on UN Security Council reform is off the mark, to say the least.
“We believe that the foreign policy that is devoid of morality and driven solely by realpolitik is a recipe for promoting anarchical tendencies in international relations. In the pursuit of its foreign policy, Pakistan has always upheld the principles of international law. India’s aversion to moral and legal norms is understandable given the fact that it continues to violate the principles as enshrined in UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as well as several UN resolutions,” Basit told journalists.
When asked if there was any possibility of resumption of ‘composite dialogue’ during a meeting between foreign ministers of Pakistan and India as the Indian foreign minister has given an invitation to Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi to visit India in December or January, the spokesperson reiterated that India’s policy vis-à-vis Pakistan clearly lacks clarity, so it was childish to expect something before talks.

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