Pakistan wanted to offer India easy access to Kartarpur, visa at airport for journalists: Pak Info Min

Srinagar: Pakistan’s foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi was all set to offer India a corridor for Sikh pilgrims to visit the Kartarpur Sahib shrine if he had met external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj in New York on 26 September, The Print reported on Sunday.

But when India cancelled the talks Friday, within 24 hours of confirming the meeting, it over-rode the agenda of promoting people-to-people cooperation with Pakistan articulated by former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee.

The external affairs ministry has said that the “brutal killings” of special police officers in Jammu & Kashmir indicated Islamabad’s double standards.

Pakistani information minister Fawad Chaudhry told ThePrint that there were lots of ideas in store for the Qureshi-Swaraj meeting to promote dialogue and improve relations, including easy access to Kartarpur Sahib – a dearly held desire of the Indian side.

“All arrangements have been made from our side. The first time a pilgrim comes, he/she will have to buy a ticket. You come, do your darshan and return. Simple,” Chaudhry told ThePrint.

Of course, like all diplomatic negotiations, the offer would have been structured in a way that both countries could have saved face.

So, India would have asked about Kartarpur Sahib, and the Pakistani side would have responded. Swaraj and Qureshi would have each won something for their countries.

Another proposal was to make it easier for Indian journalists to visit Pakistan.

“For example, we very much wanted to improve the methods by which Indian journalists can visit Pakistan without any hassles,” the minister said.

Asked what that meant, he said the information ministry had told the foreign ministry that if “we certified that the applicant is a professional journalist, then he will get a visa at the airport, or without any hassles from the Pakistan high commission in Delhi”.

Chaudhry said Pakistan was very keen to “create a conducive environment for full-fledged negotiations” with India.

He added that Islamabad was hoping Prime Minister Narendra Modi could come to Pakistan to attend the SAARC summit.

The last time Pakistan hosted a SAARC summit was in January 2004, which was attended by Vajpayee. In 2017, it was Pakistan’s turn to host the summit again. But India refused to go, because of Pakistan’s promotion of cross-border terrorism, and also persuaded several other south Asian countries to not go either.

According to SAARC rules, even if one country doesn’t attend, the summit gets called off.

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