Pakistan Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar accused India of engaging in “war-mongering” in the aftermath of clashes and killing of two Indian soldiers at the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir.
Khar also said Pakistan is “deeply disappointed” to hear statements from India that are “upping the ante” and claimed her Government is creating a “precedence” of not following war-mongering.
India, Pakistan and the South Asian region cannot afford a conflict between the two countries and the doors of dialogue have to remain open, she said, adding her Government wants the dialogue process to be “uninterrupted and uninterruptible.”
The Foreign Minister’s comments came close on the heels of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s stern warning to Pakistan that it cannot be “business as usual” between the neighbours after tension flared up at the LoC following the killing of two soldiers — one of whom was beheaded — by Pakistani troops.
“What do we see today? We see three incidents across the LoC. We see war-mongering which puts the last 60 years actively back into our memory. War-mongering coming in from the other side of the border which is, I thought, the thing of yesteryears, thing that we had put behind us,” Khar said at an event at the Asia Society here yesterday.
“It is deeply disturbing to hear statements (from India) which are upping the ante where one politician is competing with the other to give a more hostile statement,” Khar, who is in the city on the occasion of Pakistan’s Presidency this month at the UN Security Council, said.
Khar said a “typical” Pakistani government would have responded with “tit-for-tat” statements but her Government has made “pacifying statements” that called for respecting the dialogue process in response to the “hostile statement” India has made in the last few days over the clashes and killings of soldiers at the LoC.
She said there is no question of Pakistan authorising the beheading and killing of any Indian soldier as it would not be conducive for the peace process.