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US rules out intervention in Kashmir row

Islamabads attempt to get Obama to mediate fails
Last Updated 22 October 2010, 18:46 IST

Just days ahead of American President Barack Obama’s departure for India, Pakistan’s desperate attempt to get the superpower to play a mediatory role on Kashmir was firmly rejected by the United States.

Responding to fresh calls by Pakistan seeking its intervention on the Kashmir issue, the Obama administration made it clear that it was for New Delhi and Islamabad to find a resolution through “additional dialogue.”

The American position was affirmed a day after Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi insisted that the US play an active role in the resolution of Kashmir and other disputes in the South Asian region. “We recognise the importance of Kashmir to both countries. We absolutely want to see tensions eased and ultimately a resolution to the situation in Kashmir,” State Department spokesman P J Crowley said at a news conference at the Foreign Press Centre here.

Additional dialogue

“That we believe needs to come through additional dialogue between Pakistan and India. We have not been asked by both countries to play a particular role,” he said. “But this is the reason why, for a number of reasons we continue to encourage further dialogue between India and Pakistan,” Crowley said in response to a question. Qureshi, who is in Washington for the US-Pak Strategic Dialogue, had raised the Kashmir issue at a conference, asking the US to help in its resolution.

“It is in the interest of lasting peace, stability and development of the region that the US works for the resolution of disputes in South Asia. This has to begin with justice for the Kashmiri people,” Qureshi said.

Qureshi also referred to recent unrest in Jammu and Kashmir saying “any person of conscience cannot ignore the use of brute force against defenceless Kashmiri youth. In this unfolding tragedy, over 100 Kashmiris have lost their lives in the past three months, many of them teenagers,” he said.

Qureshi was responding to a question at an event jointly organised by the prestigious Brookings Institute and Asia Society. His comments came hours after the third round of the Strategic Dialogue between the US and Pakistan began.

Contending that Pakistan was “deeply interested” in a peaceful and stable South Asia, Qureshi claimed that the prospect, however, “is in danger again by the recent events in Kashmir.” The Pakistani foreign minister’s comments have come despite the US’s repeated assertion that Kashmir was a bilateral issue between India and Pakistan and it has to be solved by the two countries.

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(Published 22 October 2010, 13:19 IST)

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