Tuesday, January 13, 2026
ADVT 
International

India, Pakistan begin talking again - in Bangkok

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Dec, 2015 01:33 PM
    India and Pakistan on Sunday quietly resumed their stalled dialogue in Bangkok, with their National Security Advisors discussing an array of contentious bilateral issues and promising to "carry forward the constructive engagement".
     
    A joint statement issued after the meeting said Ajit Doval of India and Naseer Khan Janjua of Pakistan held discussions "in a candid, cordial and constructive atmosphere".
     
    Foreign secretaries S. Jaishanker of India and Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry of Pakistan took part in the meeting.
     
    "Discussions covered peace and security, terrorism, Jammu and Kashmir, and other issues including tranquility along the LoC (Line of Control)", the statement said.
     
    Doval and Janjua "were guided by the vision of the two leaders for a peaceful, stable and prosperous South Asia. It was agreed to carry forward the constructive engagement", it said.
     
    Official pictures showed Doval and Janjua shaking hands in a warm atmosphere at the venue.
     
    The Sunday meeting followed the meeting of Prime Ministers Narendra Modi of India and Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan in Paris on the sidelines of the Conference of Parties (CoP) 21 climate summit on November 30.
     
    After a long gap, Modi and Sharif had a brief but warm chat as they bumped into each other in Paris.
     
    This was the first meeting between them since they met on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) meeting in Ufa, Russia, in July this year.
     
    After the Ufa meet, they directed their foreign secretaries to initiate the process of renewal of bilateral talks, including meetings between their national security advisers.
     
    But talks between Doval and his then Pakistani counterpart Sartaj Aziz scheduled in New Delhi in August were axed after the Pakistan envoy here insisted on inviting Hurriyat leaders for a reception in honour of Aziz.
     
    The Bangkok meeting came ahead of External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's visit this week to Pakistan for the Heart of Asia conference - a multilateral engagement on Afghanistan.
     
    Post Ufa, firing and shelling across the LoC and the international border that split Jammu and Kashmir between India and Pakistan dramatically increased, causing serious strains in bilateral ties.
     
    The border incidents have since scaled down, as dramatically, leading to the Bangkok meet.
     
    While India considers Pakistan-backed terrorism as a key issue in the normalization of bilateral relations, Islamabad wants the focus on Jammu and Kashmir, whose ownership it contends.
     
    After Ufa, the Pakistani military brass had stated that all further dialogue with India would have to cover the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, where a separatist campaign since 1989 has claimed thousands of lives.
     
    The Doval-Janjua meeting received mixed reaction in India, with one Congress leader questioning the Modi government's apparent U-turn vis-a-vis Pakistan.
     
    Manish Tewari called it a "grand betrayal" by the government "and a reflection of the flip flop on its Pakistan policy".
     
    Former Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah said it was good to see India and Pakistan resume the dialogue process.
     
    "Perhaps this is the way quiet progress will be made away from each other's capitals and the glare of media-driven expectations.
     
    "Now the challenge is to make sure the Indo-Pakistan dialogue process is ring-fenced from incidents designed specifically to derail i

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death
    OTTAWA — A senior Canadian government official says he adamantly rejects a Kurdish account of a friendly-fire incident in Iraq that saw peshmerga fighters kill one Canadian soldier and wound three others. Sgt. Andrew Joseph Doiron was gunned down in the night-time darkness Friday when his special forces unit was surprised by a hail of gunfire from a group of their Kurdish peshmerga allies.

    Canadian official 'strongly refutes' Kurdish account of friendly-fire death

    IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians

    IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians
    The Islamic State (IS) militants on Sunday released 19 Christian Assyrians they had kidnapped last month, a monitoring group reported.The 19 people are the first batch of 29 Assyrians the sharia court of the IS exonerated on Saturday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said, Xinhua reported.

    IS releases 19 abducted Christian Assyrians

    Western leaders condemn killing of Russia's Nemtsov, press Kremlin for full investigation

    Western leaders condemn killing of Russia's Nemtsov, press Kremlin for full investigation
    People lays flowers at the place where Boris Nemtsov, a charismatic Russian opposition leader and sharp critic of President Vladimir Putin, was attacked, at Red Square in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2015. Nemtsov was gunned down Saturday near the Kremlin, just a day before a planned protest against the government. (AP Photo/Denis Tyrin)

    Western leaders condemn killing of Russia's Nemtsov, press Kremlin for full investigation

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature
    A woman teacher in an Indian school in Qatar's capital Doha has reportedly been forced to quit her job after she posted a caricature of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on her Facebook page, media reported Thursday.

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature
    A woman teacher in an Indian school in Qatar's capital Doha has reportedly been forced to quit her job after she posted a caricature of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on her Facebook page, media reported Thursday.

    Indian teacher in Qatar forced to quit over Modi caricature

    Check out the first American Sikh superhero who loves Elvis

    Check out the first American Sikh superhero who loves Elvis
     There's a new superhero in town and he doesn't sport a cape, mask or wear embarrassing tights. He wears a turban and he fights the Taliban and is a huge Elvis fan.

    Check out the first American Sikh superhero who loves Elvis