Thursday, 28 February 2019

As Islamabad receives dossier against Jaish, Masood Azhar unwell

Srinagar

Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi has said that if India has “solid evidence” regarding Jaish-e-Muhammad chief Masood Azhar’s involvement in the Pulwama attack, it should share that with Pakistan “so we can convince the judiciary and the people,” CNN reported.

Dawn quoted Qureshi from the CNN interview where the foreign minister said, “My message to the Indians is that this is a new government that has a new mindset. We want to live in peace. We have a people-centric agenda. We want to concentrate on fixing the economy. We want to improve governance and eradicate corruption in Pakistan. That’s the mandate given to us.”

“We want to see peace and reconciliation in Pakistan and the region. The western front is consuming us; we do not want escalation on the eastern front. The policy of our government is that we will not allow our soil to be used by any organisation or individual for terrorism against anyone, and that includes India,” Dawn quoted Qureshi from the CNN interview.

Qureshi was asked what he thought of India’s desire to have the JeM’s head’s name on the international terrorist list. “We will be open to any step that leads to de-escalation. If they have good, solid evidence, please sit and talk, initiate a dialogue and we will show reasonableness.”

When asked if Azhar was present in Pakistan and would the government go after him, Qureshi replied: “He is in Pakistan, according to my information. He is very unwell, to the extent that he cannot leave his house.”

According to CNN, he urged India to share with Pakistan any evidence that “is acceptable to the courts of Pakistan”.

Regarding Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s decision to release the Indian Air Force’s (IAF) captured pilot Abhinandan Varthaman, Qureshi told CNN: “This was a goodwill gesture and we feel that this should be an expression of Pakistan’s willingness to de-escalate.”

When asked how serious the conflict between Pakistan and India — two nuclear-armed countries — was, the Pakistan foreign minister told CNN: “The situation certainly was serious when India attacked Pakistan, when they violated our airspace and dropped bombs, when they violated the UN charter and international law. This was serious. The Indian and Pakistani air forces are fully mobilised … how dangerous can it be?”

“I hope not. That would be a mutual suicide. Pakistan never wants to escalate or want to be in a hostile position. From day one, Prime Minister Imran Khan offered that if you take one step towards peace we will take two. He wrote to the Indian prime minister, saying let the two foreign ministers meet on the sidelines in New York so that they can chart a way forward,” Qureshi was quoted by CNN as having said.

“When this Pulwama tragic incident took place and I landed in Munich for the security conference and I learned about it, what did I do? I condemned, condoled and then the prime minister made a reasonable offer that ‘if you have actionable evidence, share it with us and we will honestly, sincerely investigate,” CNN quoted Qureshi as saying.

“I wish India, instead of attacking Pakistan, had shared earlier the dossier, which we received today,” Qureshi told CNN.



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