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Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari. Photo Courtesy: AFP
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari. Photo Courtesy: AFP

Zardari backtracks on J&K 'terrorists' remarks

Mon-Oct 06, 2008

Islamabad / Press Trust of India

Facing flak for dubbing militants in Kashmir as terrorists, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday appeared to soften his stand but did not completely backtrack from his controversial comment.

Zardari spoke through Information Minister Sherry Rehman, who in a statement clarified there is no change in Pakistan's Kashmir policy and that the President has never called the legitimate struggle of Kashmiris "an expression of terrorism."

The President's remarks challenged the very basic policy on which Pakistan's Armed Forces have become an all pervading institution in the country. The comments marked a radical change from Pakistan's stated position and the first by a top leader of the country.

Former premier Nawaz Sharif's PML-N was among other parties, which had slammed the President for his remarks in an interview to 'Wall Street Journal' which was welcomed by India as a good step.

In the statement, Sherry Rehman said Pakistan was committed to the Kashmiri people's right for self-determination.

The President, she said, had "made it very clear that the just cause of Kashmir and its struggle for self-determination has been a consistent central position of the (ruling) Pakistan People's Party for the last 40 years".

"There has been no change in this policy," Rehman said.

"The President has never called the legitimate struggle of Kashmiris an expression of terrorism, nor has he downplayed the sufferings of the Kashmiris. All his statements on India should be viewed in the context of Pakistan's current bilateral relations with that country," she added.

The government "is firmly committed to extending moral and diplomatic support to the just cause of Kashmiris for their right of self-determination", Rehman said.

PML-N, which is the main opposition, on Sunday took strong exception to Zardari's description of militant groups operating in Jammu and Kashmir as terrorists and said it would raise the issue in parliament. Zardari's statement was also criticised by hardline religious groups.

Zardari made the comment during an interview with the Wall Street Journal. In the same interview, Zardari also said that "India has never been a threat to Pakistan".

Rehman described the ongoing Pakistan-India composite peace dialogue and several confidence-building measures as examples of the "warming bilateral relations".

"However, our efforts for peace with India will not be traded off with our principled stand on Kashmir," she said.
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Comments For This Post

it shows two faces of these pakistanis. they are like prostitutes they change there sound with each customer everyday.they should be nuked.

Mon, 10/06/2008 - 21:41

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