Under the agreement, the two nuclear-armed neighbours, are required to submit the lists of all their respective nuclear installations and facilities – civilian and military – on January 1, every year.
The two countries had signed the Agreement on Prohibition of Attacks against Nuclear Installations and Facilities on December 31, 1988.
“In accordance with the aforesaid agreement, a list of requisite facilities in Pakistan was given to the Indian High Commission official at the Foreign Office today,” says a statement from the Foreign Office.
The Indian side also handed over its list to the Pakistan High Commission official at the ministry of external affairs in New Delhi, it added.
In a related development, the two countries also swapped lists of each other’s prisoners under an agreement signed in 2008.
The Agreement on Consular Access requires the two countries to exchange lists of prisoners in each other’s custody on January 1 and July 1, every year.
“Consistent with the provisions of this agreement, the ministry of foreign affairs gave a list of Indian prisoners in Pakistan to the Indian High Commission Official today,” said another statement from the Foreign Office.
The Indian side also handed-over a list of Pakistani prisoners in India to the Pakistan High Commission official at the ministry of external affairs in the Indian capital
Relations between the two countries have been plagued by border and resource disputes, and accusations of Pakistani militant activity against India.
A slow-moving peace process, known as composite dialogue in diplomatic parlance, resumed in March 2010. The dialogue was abandoned after 166 people were killed in the 2008 Mumbai attacks, blamed on Pakistan-based extremist group (Lashkar-e-Taiba).
As part of the resumed dialogue process, experts from the two countries recently held peace talks in Islamabad on nuclear confidence-building measures.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 2nd, 2012.
COMMENTS (11)
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@Hu Jintao: Please think rationally, can Pakistan be able to use even one against India ? Possession of twenty or even less toys would have been enough to act as a deterrent against India but adding 100 or more is nothing but a stupidity and colossal wastage of foreign exchange worth billions of dollars received in aid, which could have been gainfully utilised in uplifting of Pak's failing economy.
@Hu Jintao:
Having a lot of water is good as long as it doesn't drown you. Ditto with nuclear weapons.
@Malik:
Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam was never an illegal peddler of nukes
Yes share it. To better understand what is at stake, pls read
http://rupeenews.com/2011/12/rehman-maliks-operation-blue-tulsi/
No doubt both turn to the American's to provide the accurate information.
Meaningless.
Pakistan have more nuclear weapons than India, so this will help Pakistan to show it has some superiority over India as in that of other fields.
I don't see any logic behind exchanging the list of nuclear installations between Pakistan and India, as in case of a war between two countries, would any country not attack where the nuclear installations are made by the other country?
What a stupid and futile effort.
Waste of time and waste of taxpayer's money.
Nice CBM isn't it ? I feel like one time bomb is ticking in front of me. I know it will be set of soon by the same old enemy but i don't know when and i don't know why am i not doing something about it. Let admit, they have got away with 26/11 like the dozens of such attacks earlier. Ye luv-me-luv-me-not ka game kab tak chalega ? Jadu ki jhappi bekaar hai. Kuchh alag karo Manmohan sir ji.......... sadda dil mange more.............
cnt understand y people of pakistan keep writing new delhi as new dehli...coz its not! ...plz correct ur self...
at first glance i read this as "nuclear prisoners lists" and the name of AQ khan came into my mind. We make em prisoner and they make em presidents.