Swaraj, Aziz optimistic about improvement in Indo-Pak ties

Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj being greeted by Pakistan’s Foreign Affairs Minister Sartaj Aziz at dinner for HoA delegates in Islamabad on Tuesday.(UNI)
Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj being greeted by Pakistan’s Foreign Affairs Minister Sartaj Aziz at dinner for HoA delegates in Islamabad on Tuesday.(UNI)

ISLAMABAD, Dec 8: Setting the tone for their talks tomorrow, Foreign Ministers of India and Pakistan today expressed optimism and desire to improve ties which have witnessed strain in the past few months, maintaining the effort will be to carry forward the engagement.
After arriving on a two-day visit, primarily to attend a multilateral meet on Afghanistan, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said relationship between the two countries should be better and that she will hold talks with Pakistani leaders to find ways to improve bilateral ties.
“I have come with the message that ties between the two countries should be good and move forward,” said Swaraj.
Swaraj will hold talks with her Pakistani counterpart Sartaz Aziz and call on Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on the sidelines of the conference tomorrow.
Aziz said he was expecting a “good and positive” outcome from the meeting tomorrow and both sides should take forward the engagement to improve ties.
“My expectations are good and positive from talks tomorrow,” Aziz said.
When asked about Swaraj’s comment that she has come with a message that ties between the two countries should be “good and move forward”, he said, “My message is also that we should take our engagement forward and improve ties.”
Swaraj met her Pakistani counterpart Sartaj Aziz during a banquet hosted by him for the heads of delegates participating in a multilateral conference on Afghanistan.
Aziz greeted Swaraj warmly and both engaged in a brief conversation. Aziz later sat next to Swaraj.
Swaraj said talks will be to improve bilateral ties and take them forward.
“Heart of Asia conference is very important for India because it is associated with Afghanistan. That is why I have come here to participate. Since it is happening in Pakistan it is necessary and appropriate for me to meet Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and hold talks with my counterpart Sartaj Aziz to talk about improving the bilateral ties and take them forward,” Swaraj said.
Swaraj’s visit comes after talks between the National Security Advisors of India and Pakistan in Bangkok on Sunday, where they discussed terrorism, Jammu and Kashmir and a range of key bilateral issues apart from agreeing to carry forward the “constructive” engagement.
Yesterday, Aziz had said the focus of talks would be on the resumption of composite dialogue process.
Adopting a cautious approach over the agenda of talks between Swaraj and Aziz, Indian officials said they will see how the meeting goes and if there will be any point of convergence.
Aziz had said yesterday that the deadlock in Indo-Pak ties had eased to some extent.
During his talks with Swaraj, Aziz said he would discuss various matters with focus on resumption of composite dialogue process between the two countries.
Swaraj’s trip came three years after former External Affairs Minister S M Krishna’s visit here in 2012 when the two sides inked a visa liberalisation pact.
Swaraj is accompanied by Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar, who was also present during the four-hour-long meeting between National Security Advisor Ajit Doval and his Pakistani counterpart Naseer Janjua in the Thai capital.
The joint statement after the meeting of NSAs said the talks were held pursuant to a meeting between Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Sharif on the sidelines of the climate meet in Paris, rejecting the version given by the Indian side then that it was a mere “exchange of courtesies”.
Sharif had told Pakistani media that he had a “good meeting” with Modi and “doors of dialogue should open”.
Before Paris, Modi and Sharif had held bilateral meeting in Russian city of Ufa where they decided that their NSAs would meet to discuss all “terror-related” issues.
However, Pakistan had called-off Aziz’s visit after New Delhi had made it clear that he would not be allowed to meet Kashmiri separatist leaders in the Indian capital.(PTI)