Kartarpur border corridor: Pakistan and India break the ice

Two ministers, Sidhu to attend ceremony on November 28


Kazim Hamdani November 24, 2018
Swaraj, while thanking Qureshi for the invitation, excused herself from attending the event citing her election campaign commitments. PHOTO: EXPRESS

KARACHI: An Indian delegation, including two ministers and the former cricketer Navjot Singh Sidhu, will travel to Pakistan to attend on November 28 the groundbreaking ceremony of Kartarpur border corridor to be built from Indian border to one of the most sacred sites of Sikhs in Punjab’s Narowal district.

Pakistan hails India’s decision to open Kartarpur corridor as ‘victory of peace’

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Saturday invited his Indian counterpart Sushma Swaraj to the ceremony. However, Swaraj, while thanking Qureshi for the invitation, excused herself from attending the event citing her election campaign commitments.



However, India’s Minister for Food Processing Industries Harsimrat Kaur Badal and Minister for Housing and Urban Areas Hardeep Singh Puri will come over to Pakistan instead.



Besides Swaraj, Qureshi also invited Indian Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh and Sidhu to the ceremony. Sidhu has confirmed that he received an invitation from Premier Imran Khan’s office. Talking to an Indian daily, Sidhu said, he will surely attend the event if the Indian government allows him.



Gurdwara Darbar Sahib – located in the Kartarpur area of Narowal – is the final resting place of the founder of Sikhism Guru Nanak Devji.



General Qamar Javed Bajwa told India’s cricketer-turned-politician Navjot Singh Sidhu at the inauguration of Prime Minister Imran Khan on August 18 that Pakistan was ready to open the route to Gurdwara Darbar Sahib for Guru Nanak’s 550th birth anniversary.

India had earlier not responded to the offer. But New Delhi on last Wednesday announced that it would start construction of the Kartarpur corridor up to the international border with Pakistan. The announcement was immediately welcomed by Islamabad as ‘victory for peace’.

 ‘Right direction’

Mosharraf Zaidi, who remained adviser to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 2011 to 2013, said, “Pakistan has doubled down on its resolve to see lasting peace in the region with the move.”

Zaidi said Islamabad has demonstrated its desire for peace even after New Delhi cancelled meeting of the foreign ministers of both countries on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.

“Pakistan has always been on front foot to achieve peace in the region and has repeatedly wanted New Delhi to follow suit,” he said.

However, Pakistan’s former ambassador to Yemen Zafar Hilaly said: “When Prime Minister Imran Khan had stated that he would not engage with India until the end of elections in India, then why has he [Qureshi] given this statement.” “When they’re [India] is carrying out terrorist attacks in the country then why are we trying to mend ties with them”.

Defence Analyst Talat Masood told The Express Tribune that, “This is a step in the right direction and shows that we [Pakistan] are a peace loving nation.” Masood added Islamabad realises the need for good relations with neighbours owing to the rise in terrorist attacks.

Modi jealous for not being invited to Imran Khan’s inauguration: Sidhu

He said the government knows that external as well as internal relations are important to the country. He said it all depends on Indian Prime Minister Narendar Modi stance, “if he wants to continue to play hardball or wants to ease off the rhetoric.”

He said a thawing in Pakistan-India tensions would be beneficial for both sides.

Another defence analyst, Gen (rtd) Amjad Shoaib, said it has been Islamabad’s long-term goal to make peace with India. “It is in everyone’s best interests to see peace in the region but despite our many efforts, India has always responded with a clenched fist.”

“The thing is that the Modi government is backed by hardliners spreading anti-Pakistan hysteria. It looks bad for his vote bank you see, to make peace with us,” he said, adding that, “You should expect more of the same from India in the future.”

 

 

COMMENTS (2)

Navid Raffiq | 5 years ago | Reply Why not to plant a millon trees on both sides of kartarpur corridor starting from border to gurdwara Nanak sahib.. I feel that would be a good move specially for those who intend to come to the holy place on foot
Mubaschir Inayet | 5 years ago | Reply Now....expect an attack on Indian soil by militants to spoil this change of relationship between India and Pakistan. If the two countries are smart, they must respond to any attack by declaring such attacks will not derail the peace process.
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ