Track Thoo diplomacy bringing India, Pakistan closer.
Senior diplomats, parliamentarians, policy-makers and journalists from Pakistan and India
(Anybody having the list of desh drohis from India who participated ?) met for the fourth round of the Track-II Islamabad Dialogue to discuss the state of bilateral relations, ahead of the much anticipated meeting between the foreign secretaries of the two countries on March 3.
The two delegations discussed a range of issues including the resumption of bilateral dialogue, Jammu and Kashmir, opportunities for cooperation towards the stability of Afghanistan, the shared challenges posed by climate change and the role of the media in creating an atmosphere for conducive for improving bilateral discourse.
The Islamabad Dialogue was jointly organised by the Jinnah Institute and the Centre for Dialogue and Reconciliation
(Sherry Rehman and her brigade of honey trappers) on the 26 and 27 of February, 2015. The conference is part of Jinnah Institute’s leading initiative on peace building through Track II diplomacy between India and Pakistan.
Special Assistant to the Prime Minister of Foreign Affairs, Tariq Fatemi met the delegates from India and Pakistan and gave a key note address outlining the foreign policy priorities of the government.
The participants began the two day dialogue by welcoming the upcoming visit of the Indian Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar and the opportunity it provided for a reset of bilateral relations.
In a joint statement after the meeting, they called on Islamabad and New Delhi to restart discussions on all outstanding issues and hoped that concrete progress would be made during the visit. Delegates discussed the prevailing political situation in both countries and its impact on shaping the bilateral relationship.
They emphasised the need for strict adherence to the ceasefire and maintenance of peace and tranquillity across the LoC and WB/IB. They recommended effective cooperation to address the issue of terrorism and the growing threat of extremism.
They recommended that hurdles to already agreed CBMs be removed expeditiously, especially those facilitating people-to-people contacts, travel and trade between the two countries and across the LoC. Additional CBMs under discussion should be finalized and implemented as early as possible.
They expressed the hope that resumption of dialogue will be the start of a sustained effort towards building the desired peaceful, friendly and cooperative relationship.
They urged implementation of the visa liberalization regime signed between the Foreign Ministers in 2012, which provided special non-reporting visa access and multi-entry 5 year visas for media persons;
(Visa free access for the RAPES to cultivate Indians)
Senior journalists from India and Pakistan also dissected trends in print and electronic media, highlighting that a lack of information and understanding on both sides often prevented the media playing a constructive role in peace building. They called for opening up of airwaves for news and TV channels and a liberalization of the visa regime for media persons from both countries.
Participants welcomed recent developments in Afghanistan since the formation of the national unity government in Kabul and hoped that President Ashraf Ghani and CEO Abdullah Abdullah would lead Afghanistan towards greater stability. Delegates called for both India and Pakistan to cooperate in ensuring stability in Afghanistan, which is necessary for regional peace and progress.
(Did the Indian delegates agree to the Paki viewpoints on Afghanistan? If yes they should all be summarily shot for Treason)
Finally participants noted the impact of climate change on South Asia and urged both governments to closely cooperate in addressing water management
(More water through Indian Concessions), environmental degradation
(Vacate Siachen), maintenance of catchment areas and alternate energy solutions
(Know-how and financial help in setting up Windmills and solar power stations).