India-Pakistan talks are first since Mumbai attack
Reporting from New Delhi - Shaqeel Qalander, a furniture maker living on the Indian side of divided Kashmir, for years has been telling anyone willing to listen that India and Pakistan need to dial down their distrust, remove the cumbersome restrictions impeding trade and take other steps toward getting along.
The tradesman said he wholeheartedly welcomed Thursday’s meeting of the two nations’ foreign secretaries in New Delhi, the first formal talks between the nuclear-armed neighbors since Pakistani-based militants attacked the Indian city of Mumbai 15 months ago.
"We are very much pleased with such initiatives," Qalander said. "Everything can be resolved at the table, not with fighting and conflict."
But as someone in the economic trenches, he has few illusions. People who want to do business across the so-called Line of Control that divides Kashmir can do so only by barter, must work through government intermediaries and can ship using only small, uneconomical trucks. Qalander knows how much work it takes to bridge the gap, in trade or diplomacy.
"It takes enormous patience," he said. "At times we think no sane person can do this, but we continue to do it. There’s just so little trust."
Officials, analysts and ordinary people in Pakistan and India concur, saying they see little likelihood of a breakthrough when Pakistani Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir and his Indian counterpart, Nirupama Rao, sit down together. Still, talking is better than fighting, several said.
One problem is that both governments are going in with their guards up. "It’s quite unfortunate that the two sides have come down to the same mutually incompatible positions," said Ishtiaq Ahmad, professor of international relations at Quaid-i-Azam University in Pakistan.
India wants to focus exclusively on counter-terrorism, with a spotlight on the links between Pakistan’s security agencies and such groups as the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba. That’s a non-starter for Pakistan.
"If they continue keeping in touch with terror groups in the interest of getting at India, there’s little hope for progress," said K. Shankar Bajpai, a former Indian ambassador to Pakistan and now an analyst with the Delhi Policy Group. "They can’t keep hunting with the hounds and running with the hares."
Pakistan wants discussions centered on Kashmir, the subject of two wars between the nations. That’s a non-starter for India.
Even if there was enough goodwill to move forward, it’s difficult to know whom in Pakistan to negotiate with. Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari is on the political ropes, Prime Minister Yusaf Raza Gillani serves at the will of the president, and army chief Gen. Ashfaq Kayani is to retire this year.
"There are three centers of power -- who do you talk with?" said Dipankar Banerjee, director of New Delhi’s Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies.
Meanwhile, India’s ruling Congress Party is vulnerable to public pressure in any normalization talks.
Nor was the mood on the eve of the talks helped by reports that Indian border guards were fired on Wednesday from the Pakistani side of Kashmir, resulting in the injury of one officer. Pakistan denied that its troops fired.
Authorities said a two-day battle that ended Wednesday between Indian security forces and suspected Islamic insurgents on the Indian side of Kashmir had killed three Indian soldiers and three militants.
Ordinary Indians and Pakistanis noted their own perceived hurdles to reconciliation.
"No one wants war or tension, and it’s good they’re meeting," said Saleem A. Kashmiri, a school administrator in Lahore, Pakistan. "But we’d also like to see the common man’s interests addressed. Bigger even than terrorism is the water fight between the two countries. If we have no water, we have no crops."
Others cited ways in which the border has disrupted their lives.
"I had a very good internship offer in [the Indian city of] Ahmedabad, but with the visa issue, I just couldn’t do it," said Marvi Mazhar, who recently graduated from architecture school in Karachi, Pakistan.
The biggest problem is the politicians, said Saurabh Chaudhary, 26, New Delhi-based owner of a small-events management firm.
"At the people level everything is fine," Chaudhary said. "But at the political level there will never be a solution. . . . So in a way, there is normalization, but we are still enemies."
Asia
Iran blames US for regional instability
Araghchi discusses US talks with Saudi foreign minister
Ships start sailing through Hormuz under UN evacuation scheme, agency says
Exchange of accusations erupts between Iranian and Yemeni representatives
NEWS FEED
Today marks Ashura in Azerbaijan
Lent.az marks its 18th anniversary
Trump says Iran making 'very big' concessions
Iran blames US for regional instability
Rubio: Upcoming technical talks with Iran will be at expert level, start June 30
Zelenskyy says drone signal repeaters in Belarus have been switched off
US Treasury Department has removed seven individuals and two vessels from sanctions lists against Russia
Araghchi discusses US talks with Saudi foreign minister
Ghalibaf: Azerbaijan-Iran relations have seen greater development over the past year
Sahiba Gafarova meets Speaker of Iran's Parliament
Meeting held with delegation from Pakistan National Defense University
Ships start sailing through Hormuz under UN evacuation scheme, agency says
Iraqi President congratulates Azerbaijani leader on Independence Day
Speakers of Azerbaijani and Turkish parliaments meet, stress importance of Azerbaijan-Türkiye strategic alliance - UPDATED
Ebola outbreak is still outpacing response, WHO's Tedros says
Helicopter crashes in Russia's Krasnodar region
Exchange of accusations erupts between Iranian and Yemeni representatives
Azerbaijan’s Prime Minister meets with Speaker of Türkiye’s Grand National Assembly
Azerbaijani MFA: France continues to pursue outdated and one-sided political approaches
Ghalibaf: Iran learned who its friends and enemies were during the war, Azerbaijan stood by Iran
CENTCOM airstrike in Syria kills senior ISIS leader
Azerbaijan Railways showcases Azerbaijan’s transit and logistics potential at Transport Logistic China 2026
President Ilham Aliyev received delegation led by Speaker of Iran’s Islamic Consultative Assembly
Drone attempting to violate Azerbaijan’s border neutralized - PHOTO
Azerbaijan extradites internationally wanted individual to Kyrgyzstan
Iran-Gulf reconciliation talks expected to be held in Saudi Arabia, diplomat says
Jeyhun Bayramov travels to Poland to attend Ukraine Recovery Conference
Israel, Lebanon discussing pilot scheme for handover of territory
Ukraine returns sailors from ship detained by Iranian security forces
Erdoğan says one-on-one meeting with Trump likely at NATO Summit
Trump: Negotiations will end immediately if Iran charges ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz
Azerbaijan assumes chairmanship of the Parliamentary Union of OIC member states - UPDATED
AZAL’s first Airbus A321neo delivered in Hamburg - PHOTO
AZAL: New Airbus A321neo can be safely operated on any route - VIDEO
Iran says access to attacked nuclear sites depends on final US deal
Katz vows IDF won’t withdraw from south Lebanon ‘even if there’s an American demand’
Media representatives visit Airbus production facility in Hamburg - PHOTO
President Ilham Aliyev received delegation led by Speaker of Grand National Assembly of Türkiye
Azerbaijan's insurance market grows by nearly 2% this year
Erdoğan: Israel has been doing everything it can for 10 days to undermine a US-Iran agreement
Lavrov: Diplomatic solution to Ukraine crisis remains possible
France confirms first Ebola case in doctor returning from DR Congo mission
Tehran's Mehrabad Airport to close due to Ali Khamenei's funeral ceremonies
Ukraine hits two airfields and air defence systems in Crimea, including Pantsir-S1 units
Drones strike major Russian gas processing plant 1,500 km from Ukraine
Azercell and Samsung launch a new campaign
Presidential aide: Main goal in cotton farming by 2030 is to increase average yield to 50 centners per hectare
Peskov: Armenia is currently choosing its path of development
AZAL: Today's Baku-Nakhchivan-Baku flights cancelled
Central Bank of Azerbaijan preparing amendments to compulsory insurance regulations