Pakistan must punish Mumbai killers, says PMOctober 11th, 2009 MUMBAI - Prime Minister Manmohan Singh demanded Sunday that Pakistan should try and punish those who masterminded the Mumbai terror attack last year. The prime minister told reporters here that diplomatic pressure from India and the international community had forced Pakistan to admit for the first time that its nationals were involved in the terror assault that killed some 170 people.
Lashkar-e-Taiba bent on striking India again: NYTSeptember 29th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based group widely believed to be behind the Mumbai terror attacks, remains largely intact and determined to strike India again, The New York Times has reported citing current and former members of the group and intelligence officials. Despite pledges from Pakistan to dismantle militant groups operating on its soil, and the arrest of a handful of operatives, Lashkar has persisted, even flourished, since 10 recruits killed 163 people in a rampage through Mumbai last November, the influential US daily said in a report from Karachi.
Dismantling of Lashkar network in Pakistan won't take place soon: NYTJuly 27th, 2009 RAWALPINDI - Chances of the Lashkar-e-Toiba network being dismantled in Pakistan in the immediate future appear remote, in spite of Islamabad purportedly showing a willingness to prosecute the group, the New York Times reports. Brief appearances before a court of the five men who allegedly organized terrorist strikes in Mumbai last year suggest that Pakistan is taking the first steps to bring them to justice, but behind these first glimmerings of the case, sympathies for Lashkar-e-Taiba and its jihadist and anti-Indian culture run deep in the country, raising a serious challenge to dismantling the network.
Lashkar-e-Taiba may attack India again: Top UN officialJuly 15th, 2009 NEW YORK - Richard Barrett, the coordinator of the UN Security Council's al-Qaeda and Taliban Sanctions Monitoring Committee on Wednesday said that the Pakistan-based terrorist group, Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) group, may target India again. "Lashkar-e-Taiba tactics is quite obvious.
India would counter Lashkar threat effectively : TharoorJuly 15th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor on Wednesday said the government would take necessary steps to counter the threat posed by the Lashkar- e- Toiba (LeT). Reacting to a statement issued by the Co-ordinator of the UNSC Committee on Taliban and Afghanistan Richard Barret, Tharoor said the government is conscious of the possible threat from various militant organisations.
Obama wants India, Pakistan to talk, but will not tell howJune 21st, 2009 WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama would like India and Pakistan to have a dialogue to resolve their differences, but the US cannot dictate how they should go about it or mediate in the process. "I believe that there are opportunities, maybe not starting with Kashmir but starting with other issues, that Pakistan and India can be in a dialogue together and over time to try to reduce tensions and find areas of common interest," Obama told Pakistan's Dawn group in an interview published Sunday.
LeT, not Taliban poses biggest threat to take over Pak: US ExpertJune 18th, 2009 WASHINGTON - While fears are rife that Pakistan could fall into the hands of the Taliban, an American expert on the South Asian issues has warned that it was not the Taliban, but Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which possess the real danger to the sovereignty of the troubled nation. Famous author and thinker, Selig Harrison, warned that the LeT is could topple the democratic set-up of Pakistan and take over the reigns of the country.
Pakistan has moved fewer troops to Indian border: HolbrookeJune 11th, 2009 WASHINGTON - Pakistan has moved more troops to its border with Afghanistan than it has to its border with India since the Nov 26 Mumbai terror attacks, according to a top US official. But the US special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Richard Holbrooke, declined to say how many troops Pakistan has moved from the border with India even as he refuted a suggestion that Pakistani troops there are back to the pre-Mumbai attack levels.
US hopes intelligence sharing will reduce India, Pakistan tensionsMay 23rd, 2009 WASHINGTON - As a new government took office in New Delhi, the United States expressed satisfaction at India and Pakistan sharing intelligence to show needed cooperation to ensure peace and stability in the region. "Obviously he's in the past few weeks have been very involved in our discussions with Pakistan" related to recent meetings in Washington," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Friday when asked how President Barack Obama wants to engage the two South Asian neighbours to reduce tensions between them.
No evidence of India supporting terror in Pak: HolbrookeApril 25th, 2009 LAHORE - US Special Representative on Afghanistan and Pakistan Richard Holbrooke has said there is no evidence that India is supporting violence in Pakistan. "If the Indians were supporting those miscreants in Pakistan that would be extraordinarily bad, really dangerous, but they are not doing so.
Mumbai attacks: Pakistan's 'blank cheque' to China on dealing with IndiaJanuary 21st, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Cornered by the world community on its response to the Mumbai terror attacks, Pakistan has given all-weather friend China a 'blank cheque' to negotiate on its behalf with India in the aftermath of the carnage. 'Go to Delhi, you have a blank cheque from us,' Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi Wednesday recalled telling visiting Chinese special envoy He Yafei in December to deal with the tensions generated by the Mumbai attacks.
Zardari urges world powers to defuse India-Pakistan tensionsJanuary 10th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari has appealed to the world powers to come forward and play their role towards easing tensions between Pakistan and India, GEO TV reported. Speaking at a dinner reception hosted in honour of the foreign ambassadors Saturday, President Zardari expressed concern that prevailing India-Pakistan tensions could sabotage efforts being made for bringing stability and peace in the region.
ISI has given feedback to India on Mumbai attacks: GilaniJanuary 9th, 2009 ISLAMABAD - Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency has 'given its feedback' to India about the Mumbai attacks, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said Friday, media reports said. Gilani's remarks came shortly before US vice-president-elect Joe Biden arrived here for talks with the Pakistani leadership on the tensions with India in the wake of the carnage in Mumbai, reported Aaj TV.
India, Pakistan swap nuclear lists amid Mumbai tensionsDecember 31st, 2008 NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD - Amid simmering tensions over the Mumbai terror attacks, India and Pakistan Thursday stuck to their nearly two-decade old agreement of exchanging lists of their nuclear installations on the first day of the new year - a practice aimed at protecting the sites in case of a war. The Indian side handed over its list to an official of the Pakistan High Commission at the external affairs ministry in New Delhi.
Bush urges India, Pakistan to show restraintDecember 31st, 2008 WASHINGTON - US President George W. Bush telephoned Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari Wednesday in an attempt to ease tensions following the November terrorist attack in Mumbai.