India tells Pak to deliver on anti-terror promises

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

In the first political face-off after the Mumbai attacks, India has bluntly told Pakistan that it needs to "deliver" on promises to act against LeT, Jaish-e-Mohammad and other outfits in the terror syndicate.

PARIS: In the first political face-off after the Mumbai attacks, India has bluntly told Pakistan that it needs to "deliver" on promises to act against LeT, Jaish-e-Mohammad and other outfits in the terror syndicate operating from its soil in its own interest.
 
"It is in the interest of Pakistan itself that it delivers. They have to take action to fulfill the assurance that their territory will not be used by organised terror outfits to target India," Minister of State for External Affairs Anand Sharma said.
 
New Delhi's tough message was conveyed by Sharma during a meeting with Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.
 
Asked about reports that Jamaat-ud-Daawa (JuD), front outfit of Lashkar-e-Taiba, still operating from Pakistan, the minister told a television channel that it is for the UN security council to ensure that the decisions taken against the outfits that have been proscribed, are firmly implemented by all the member states.
 
Also, the world body needs to ensure that those individuals named as terrorists were punished.
 
"When it comes to the various outfits, it is not a question of their names. The world knows who they are, whether it is LeT, JeM, Taliban or al-Qaeda, they are part of the same terror syndicate and unfortunately, they are located, when we talk about their operation base, in our neighbourhood.
 
"And to be precise, in the territory of Pakistan. It is, therefore, important for Pakistan also to act," Sharma said.
 
Qureshi said that Pakistan has made a number of suggestions including a joint investigation to get to the bottom of the terror strikes and to support India in bringing the perpetrators of the crime to justice.
 
"We have also offered a high-level delegation led by the foreign minister of Pakistan to India accompanied by security people, intelliegence people to sit with our Indian friends, to work out modalities of cooperation," Qureshi said.

The two leaders met on the sidelines of a conference aimed at fostering cooperation between Afghanistan and its neighbours.
        
Qureshi and Sharma were seated next to each other at a news conference on Sunday after the closed-door talks.
       
Sharma said that India had acted with remarkable restraint and maturity in responding to the November 26 attacks and highlighted the urgency with which Pakistan needs to act to dismantle terrorist networks operating on its soil.
      
"We all know where these terror outfits are and where the perpetrators are," said Sharma. "The only way forward is to ensure that democracies flourish and the perpetrators of the dastardly attacks are brought to justice quickly."
 
Asked what was exactly said about the Mumbai attacks at the conference, Sharma said "there was a sense of outrage and everyone has condemned it without any reservation."
 
"India is outraged. India has been attacked. There is no question of expectations. No question of hollow promises of words. Assurances have to be fulfilled," Sharma said when asked what India expects from Pakistan as reassurance.
 
The minister said India had conveyed to the meeting that terrorism is a menace not only for our region, but for the entire world.
 
"What happened in Mumbai was an assault on the prestige of India and an affront to our people. And it is therefore imperative that the perperators are brought to justice.