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A deadlock over Kashmiri separatist leaders on Friday cast a cloud of uncertainty over the upcoming Indo-Pak NSA-level meeting after the two countries engaged in strong exchanges but neither side was willing to blink. Uncertainty continued late on Friday night as New Delhi said it wanted the parleys to be held but was awaiting Islamabad\'s response to its advisory asking Pakistani NSA Sartaj Aziz not to meet Kashmiri separatists.
We want talks, but no speaking to Hurriyat: Doval
New Delhi/Islamabad: A deadlock over Kashmiri separatist leaders on Friday cast a cloud of uncertainty over the upcoming Indo-Pak NSA-level meeting after the two countries engaged in strong exchanges but neither side was willing to blink. Uncertainty continued late on Friday night as New Delhi said it wanted the parleys to be held but was awaiting Islamabad's response to its advisory asking Pakistani NSA Sartaj Aziz not to meet Kashmiri separatists.
"We want the talks to happen. We are prepared to hold the talks. But Pakistan has not yet got back to us (on the advisory asking Aziz not to go ahead with the talks with Hurriyat leaders on August 23). We have also sought clarity on the agenda for the talks, which should be held as per the Ufa joint statement," Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Vikas Swarup told newspersons in Jaipur.
In the morning, Swarup said in a statement that it would "not be appropriate" for Aziz to meet Hurriyat representatives ahead of the August 23-24 meeting with India's National Security Advisor Ajit Doval. The Indian warning was conveyed on Thursday, Swarup said. Such a meeting would not be in keeping with the spirit and intent of the Ufa (Russia) understanding to jointly work to combat terrorism, he said.
"We have also sought confirmation of our proposed agenda for the National Security Advisor-level talks, which was conveyed to the Pakistani side on August 18," he said in a statement.
In Islamabad, the Aziz-Doval talks were discussed on Friday at a high-level meeting on security, chaired by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and attended by Aziz and army chief General Raheel Sharif. Kashmiri separatist leaders in Jammu and Kashmir said Pakistan's envoy in New Delhi had invited them for talks with Aziz. Pakistani officials say there will be no change in that programme.
Both factions of the Hurriyat Conference, led by Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq respectively, and other separatist leaders such as Yasin Malik and Naeem Khan, have been invited by High Commissioner Abdul Basit of Pakistan. At the July 10 talks in Ufa between Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Sharif, both sides announced a meeting between the two NSAs in New Delhi to discuss terrorism-related issues.
Since the mandate for the NSAs was only terrorism-related issues, Kashmir would not figure on the agenda and thus Aziz's meeting with Kashmiri separatists does not make sense, official sources said. Aziz will arrive in New Delhi on August 23 and meet Hurriyat leaders at a reception at Pakistan House, High Commissioner Basit's residence, that evening.
On Thursday, Pakistan indicated it was going ahead with the Hurriyat talks. Pakistan foreign office spokesman Qazi Khalilullah said: "There is nothing unusual in such meetings and it has been the normal practice for Pakistan to consult Hurriyat leaders prior to high-level meetings with India.
The statement came as three Kashmiri separatist leaders were placed under house arrest but were later freed in Jammu and Kashmir. Indian officials say the Pakistani invite to Kashmiri separatists was designed to scuttle the NSA talks and follows a pattern of the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment.
Ever since Modi and Sharif met at Ufa, tensions between India and Pakistan have escalated due to intermittent firing and shelling by the Pakistani military along the Jammu and Kashmir border.
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