Peace process with India likely to gain pace, Foreign Office

AsiaPeace process with India likely to gain pace, Foreign Office

Islamabad: The Pakistan Foreign Office said on Thursday that it expected the peace process with India to gain pace after the installation of the new government. The Dispatch News Desk reports.

“We hope that the dialogue process would pick up momentum in all areas,” Foreign Office spokesman Aizaz Chaudhry said at the weekly media briefing.  The peace process has been on a virtual hold since the violations of the Line of Control in Kashmir at the start of this year. Tensions resurfaced when an Indian prisoner, Sarbjeet Singh, died after an attack by inmates in Lahore jail and a Pakistani, Sanaullah, was fatally beaten in Jammu jail. Another Pakistani, Abdul Jabbar, was injured in an attack in Tihar prison.

Mr Chaudhry said Pakistan had always emphasised continuity of the peace talks so that outstanding issues could be resolved.  Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, while congratulating PML-N chief Mian Nawaz Sharif on the victory of his party in the May 11 elections, had expressed the hope to work with him to “chart a new course and pursue a new destiny in the relations between our countries”.

Dr Singh also invited Mr Sharif to visit India at “a mutually convenient time”. The PML-N chief, who is set to become the next prime minister, also extended an invitation to the Indian leader to visit Pakistan.

The spokesman said Pakistan was in touch with the Indian authorities over the issue of prisoners. “We have approached the Indian government for focused discussions on the issue of prisoners. We hope that these focused discussions would address all aspects of this important issue, including the release of the 47 prisoners who have completed their sentence.”

There are some 300 Pakistani prisoners in Indian jails, of whom 47 have completed their sentences but continue to remain in detention because of delays in completion of release formalities.

The joint India-Pakistan Judicial Committee on Prisoners has made a number of recommendations for humane treatment of prisoners. Although both countries have acknowledged the work done by the body, they have been slow to implement the recommendations.

Must read

Recent News

The formation of a Judicial Commission would frustrate the legal process against the culprits of the May 9 incidents

Delayed but Not Denied: Names of 25 persons who are convicted in May 9...

0
Islamabad, Pakistan: After getting approval from the Supreme Court this week, the military courts announced the verdict of the May 9 2023 Mutiny case...

Terrorism in Russia: Central Asian Youth Becoming hired-guns

0
Monitoring Desk: The killing of top Russian General Igor Kirillov along with his assistant confirmed again connections between emerging terrorism and Central Asian republics.This...
Why the Season of US Sanctions starts against Pakistan?

Why did the Season of US Sanctions start against Pakistan?

0
Islamabad, Pakistan: On December 19, 2024, the US again imposed sanctions on Pakistan, and the Foreign Office of Pakistan believes the US decision to...
Mustafa Sayed Appointed as Inaugural Member

BRI’s Green and Low-Carbon Expert Network kicks off with Mustafa Sayed appointed as Inaugural...

0
Beijing, China: The BRI Green and Low-Carbon Expert Network (GLEN) was formally launched in Beijing.The network, supported by the Ministry of Ecology and Environment...

US imposes further sanctions on Pakistan

0
Monitoring Desk: The US has again imposed sanctions on Pakistan for its ballistic missile program claiming that Pakistan's program falls under the proliferation of...
Advertisement