Crossing borders

Even though the gesture comes rather late in the day, it should be taken up.


Editorial March 03, 2011

The Indian authorities, in principle at least, have agreed to allow a team consisting of an investigation officer, a magistrate and a doctor to come to India, talk to witnesses of the 2008 Mumbai attacks, inspect court records and review post-mortem reports. In return, they have asked for an Indian team to be allowed to interview suspects in Pakistan. The Indian decision seems to stem from fears that the chief suspect in the case, Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, as well as several of his colleagues, may walk free, as Pakistani officials have been saying that without access to evidence in India, they lack material to place before the courts. Anger in New Delhi over Islamabad’s failure to bring to justice these men accused of involvement in the Mumbai attacks continues to strain bilateral relations.

Even though the gesture comes rather late in the day, it should be taken up. If there is to be any hope of defeating terrorism in the region, cooperation between New Delhi and Islamabad is essential. The Mumbai attacks underscored this. They could simply not have been carried out had groups or individuals in India not played a part in the planning of the attacks. There are also interlinkages between realities in India, most notably in Kashmir, and the rise of groups engaged in jihad in both that region and Pakistan. The issues that surround that disputed Valley and the human rights violations that take place there meanwhile give rise to the animosity for India that gives rise to attacks of the kind seen in Mumbai.

It is important that the two countries work together to defeat terrorism. Investigative teams should indeed be allowed to cross borders. There should also be open discussion on the various factors linked to terrorism, so there can be greater hope that people on both sides of the border will be free of the terrible fear of militancy that now stalks them.

Published in The Express Tribune, March 4th, 2011.

 

COMMENTS (7)

American | 13 years ago | Reply For a while, I did think The Express Tribune was a breath of fresh air in the stale and bigoted Pakistani Newspaper-land. No Indian (let alone a group) traveled to Pakistan, or any other country, to create mayhem and killed dozens. Every country in the world is worried about terrorists from Pakistan. It is because of Kashmir ? India ? Israel ? Mossad ? RAW ? CIA ? Only bigoted and brain-washed Pakistanis will believe this. No one else does.
rash | 13 years ago | Reply This editorial is like a broken record, Kashmir, Human rights and the standard giblish. Please look inwards to your army and the govt; this violence did not emerge by itself, it was deliberately seeded, supported and made sacred by your Army and Govt. LET did not just come out of no where, it was nurtured, trained and funded by your Govt as a part of its grand plan to inflict thousand cuts to India. When a country uses terror as one of its key state policies, the result is there for every one to see in today's Pakistan. It’s not just India that is saying that Pakistan is reluctant to discard terror as a state policy, it’s the whole world. Its comical that you mention " It is important that the two countries work together to defeat terrorism"; not sure what u mean by saying that 2 countries have to work together, are you saying that India has to start eliminating all the terror camps in Pak. That offer I guess is always on from India. Its now or never for Pakistan, unless it reverses its continued support of terror as a state policy, Pakistan will continue on a path of self destruction. That is a sad for its 180 Million people.
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