Foreign Minister Hina Rubbani reached India


Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar reached India for the peaceful dialogue between both countries, E Pakistan News Reported on July 26, 2011.
Hina Rubani Khar





According to the report, Pakistan FM Hina Rabbani Khar and FM Krishna today meet in New Delhi.
Both countries want peaceful talks on Wednesday.
Hina Rabbani Khar told that the Minister level dialogue make positive results between Pakistan and India.

Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar told the media on New Delhi on Tuesday that we have educated lessons from history but are not held back by history.

Khar Said that both countries can move forward as friendly neighbors who have a stake in each other’s future and who understand the responsibility that both the countries have to the region and within the region.
The focus on Wednesday will be as much on 34-year-old Khar, Pakistan’s first female and youngest-ever foreign minister, who was appointed to the post last week.
S.M Krishna Indian Foreign Minister is 79 years old.

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Talks with India in Pak interest: Hina Khar

Talks with India in Pak interest: Hina Khar                                                                                  On return from India, Hina Rabbani Khar has said dialogue process must continue uninterrupted. Addressing a press conference at Lahore airport, the foreign minister said she and her entourage had a detailed discussion on all outstanding issues with Indian leadership. She said talks were in Pakistan’s interest. The foreign minister said she also had meetings with Kashmiri leadership, and these meetings were disliked by many in New Delhi. She however stressed that no country or region could progress without peace.



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Indo-Pak relations on right track: Krishna

New Delhi: Talks between India and Pakistan are finally back on track even though there are no key takeaways from the meeting between External Affairs Minister SM Krishna and Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar.
After the meeting both countries agreed that fighting terror should be at the top of their agenda. Krishna said that the talks were on right track and India was satisfied with the progress while Khar added that Pakistan was in favour of friendly relations with India.
Krishna said that terrorism remained the biggest threat for the two countries while addressing the media after meeting Khar at Hyderabad House in New Delhi.
"Terrorism poses continuing threat to peace and security. We have reiterated our commitment to fight this scourge in all its forms and agreed to strengthen counter-terrorism to bring those responsible for terror crimes to justice," said Krishna.
He added that Jammu and Kashmir was also discussed with the Pakistani delegation and efforts are on to find a "peaceful solution" to the issue.
In a joint statement, Krishna and Khar announced more measures on cross Line of Control travel and trade. The two ministers will meet in Islamabad in first half of 2012 to review progress in the dialogue.
India also raised issues regarding terror and "expressed displeasure" over the Hurriyat-Khar meeting.
Khar said that to have friendly relations between India and Pakistan the two sides need to invest more in resolving all outstanding issues peacefully.
"We need to make this dialgoue result oriented and a credible process. There is no alterantive to dialogue and constructive engagement. Pakistan and India are not only close neighbours but have a special responsibiltiy to promote stability for the prosperity of the region as a whole," said Khar.
"I am more confident today after having met you than i was yesterday. We are committed to this procedss. I bring the commitment of President (Asif Ali Zardari, (Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza) Gilani to our process of engagement and normalisation and increasing the bilateral interaction. This is a new era of bilateral cooperation and it is the desire of both countris to make this uninterrupted and uninterruptible process," she said.
The Pakistani Foreign Minister said that she was confident that the dialogue process could be taken forward and it was important for both the countries to talk more and deepen the understanding of each other's position
"We need to continue with this process and make this engagement a result oriented one. Listening carefully to each others and giving serious consideratioin to ideas and proposals that are on the table, I am confident of the future course of our relations that need to be normalised," she said.

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Pakistan, India revive search for enduring dialogue process


NEW DELHI, July 27: The foreign ministers of India and Pakistan revived the pursuit of an ‘uninterruptible’ dialogue process on Wednesday though both sides were aware of a nagging hurdle — their wavering trust.
“This is indeed a new era of bilateral cooperation between the two countries,” Pakistan’s Hina Rabbani Khar told India’s S.M. Krishna in a brief meeting with the media after their talks.
Ms Khar said she believed “that it is the desire and commitment of both the governments to make it an uninterrupted and uninterruptible process…There is no alternative to dialogue and to constructive engagement”.
Mr Krishna said he was satisfied at the progress in this round of the resumed dialogue.
“The outcomes have been as per our expectations. Above all, we have reaffirmed our commitment to resolve all outstanding issues through a comprehensive, serious and sustained dialogue,” Mr Krishna said.
“While being fully cognisant of the challenges that lie ahead, I can confidently say that our relations are on the right track. We have some distance to travel, but with an open mind and a constructive approach, which has been demonstrated in this round of dialogue, I am sure we can reach our desired destination of having a friendly and cooperative relationship between the two countries.”
Both countries had previously agreed to see their peace process as irreversible but hopes were belied after a spate of terror attacks. They had agreed to de-link the problem of terrorism with the continuation of their dialogue but again their leaders had to row back.
A joint statement said the two had agreed that terrorism posed a continuing threat to peace and security and reiterated their “firm and undiluted commitment” to fight and eliminate the scourge in all its forms and manifestations.
“We have also agreed on the need to strengthen cooperation on counter-terrorism to bring those responsible for terror crimes to justice,” Mr Krishna added.
He said on the Jammu and Kashmir issue, “we will continue discussions with a view to finding a peaceful solution by narrowing divergences and building convergences. Meanwhile, for the welfare of the people on both sides of the LoC, we have announced additional measures on cross-LoC travel and trade”.
“The ministers affirmed the importance of carrying forward the dialogue process with a view to resolving peacefully all outstanding issues through constructive and result-oriented engagement, and to establish friendly, cooperative and good neighbourly relations between Pakistan and India,” the joint statement said.
Singh invited to visit Pakistan: Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar held a meeting with Indian Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh here on Wednesday and discussed matters of mutual interest, APP added.
The foreign minister conveyed to the Indian prime minister the greetings of President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani.
She reiterated the commitment of the Pakistani leadership for friendly, cooperative and good neighbourly relations with India.
Ms Khar recalled that at Thimphu the two prime ministers had agreed that dialogue was the only way forward. The direction given by the two prime ministers had led to the resumption of full spectrum dialogue process.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh welcomed the progress made in the Pakistan-India dialogue process and described it as “heralding of a new spring” in relations between the two countries.
He stressed that India wanted the “friendliest” of relations with Pakistan. India wanted the resolution of all issues with Pakistan, he added.
Foreign Minister Khar handed over a letter of invitation from Prime Minister Gilani to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh accepted the invitation and said that he would visit Pakistan at mutually convenient dates.
Ms Khar was accompanied by Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir, High Commissioner Shahid Malik and Additional Secretary Sajjad Kamran.
Ms Khar also met the Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha, Ms Sushma Swaraj, and senior BJP leader L.K. Advani.
The foreign minister underscored the importance of the BJP’s support for a sustained and result-oriented engagement between Pakistan and India.
She informed both the leaders that there was consensus among all Pakistani political parties to improve relations with India.
Ms Sushma Swaraj and Mr L.K. Advani said that the BJP was in favour of better relations with Pakistan. It was during BJP government’s term of office that a number of positive developments took place in India’s relations with Pakistan.

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A new young face brings hope to Pakistan’s tortured India relationship

khar afp 1311750189 965 6411 266x300 A new young face brings hope to Pakistan’s tortured India relationshipThere’s a new smiling face in the tortured relationship between India and Pakistan. Hina Rabbani Khar, Pakistan’s 34-year old fashion-conscious and personable new foreign minister, made her first major public appearance yesterday when she held constructive talks in Delhi with her Indian counterpart, S.M.Krishna.
Appointed Pakistan’s youngest foreign minister just a few days ago, Khar spoke of a “mindset change” in both countries, and of a new generation that saw the two countries’ relationship differently from past generations. “It is our desire to make the dialogue process uninterrupted and uninterruptible” she said after meeting Krishna.
Whether or not Khar regarded Krishna, who at 79 is far more than twice her age, as a past generation, she had a point  based on her comparative youth. The fractious relationship is run by people in both countries with long, sometimes life-long, memories of their three wars, one near war, near-nuclear confrontations, and multiple deaths in both countries mostly caused by Pakistan-generated terrorism.
Comments last night on television as Indian pundits tried to come to time with a fresh and friendly face illustrated the generational problems. They talked of there being no real change in the Pakistan approach to India, especially over terrorism, and complained that India was going along with a more co-operative approach without enough in return from Pakistan. Behind these comments lies growing concern about Pakistan’s internal crises of Islamic terrorism, a collapsing economy, an ineffectual legal system and an army that has lost its élan following the killings of Osama bin Laden by US troops three months ago.
Khar was right when she said that people on both sides of the border have had enough of the confrontation and, as individuals, would like to move on. However it only would take a terrorist attack with clear links to Pakistan for the mood to change and for national anti-Pakistan feelings to supplant the more personal longing for peace.
Khar comes from an privileged feudal family background at the top of Pakistan’s society and appeared yesterday demurely dressed in white with fashion touches that included a Hermes black Birkin handbag, a string of pearls and high black heeled shoes.
She is the daughter of a prominent politician Ghulam Noor Rabbani Khar, who persuaded her to abandon a hotel job to become a politician, and the niece of Ghulam Mustafa Khar, a former governor of the Pakistan province of Punjab. One of Mustafa Khar’s ex-wives, Tehmina Durrani, described her unhappy and traumatic life in a controversial novel, My Feudal Lord that lifted the lid on Pakistani society. A review in the Far East Economic Review said it exposed “sex, incest, child abuse, kidnapping, sado-masochism, political betrayal and treason”. Originally published in 1991 by Durrani herself, the book later became an international best seller.
With such a family background, it is not surprising that questions have been asked in Pakistan as well as India about how serious a politician Khar is, and which faction of Pakistan establishment she represents. Was she was speaking yesterday just for politicians or was her positive approach supported by the Pakistan army, which wields ultimate political power?. Some observers thought that Pakistan, whose relationship with the US and other countries has worsened recent, might have decided to court international support by taking a co-operative line with India.
It certainly seemed unlikely that a new minister with limited political experience would have spoken with the confidence and poise that Khar displayed yesterday. This gave  her positive remarks added importance.
The day ended unexpectedly at the dinner with the events being put in context by Ram Jethmalani, 87, one of India’s top lawyers. In an inappropriate but accurate impromptu speech, he said that China was an “enemy” of both India and Pakistan. That was an oblique reference to China becoming Pakistan’s biggest and most influential provider of military and other support, the point being that Pakistan will never be able to make much progress with India unless China agrees. China is unlikely to agree however, because its basic approach is to destabilise India economic growth and international power wherever possible.
So major progress on peace between India and Pakistan is out of reach, but that still leaves room for Khar’s constructive day in Delhi to ease relationships and increase cross-border contacts

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Announcement of MQM decision to sit on Opposition Benches

MQM decion that MQM member r sitting in opsation bench now MQM what need to government


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Sheey v zardari



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