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Manmohan, Obama discuss issue of security & bilateral matters
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The Prime Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh meeting the US President, Mr. Barack Obama, at Blair House, Washington on April 11, 2010. |
Manish Chand and Arun Kumar | 12 Apr, 2010
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President Barack Obama
met and discussed issues, including issue of terrorism and shares India's
concerns over terror outfits like Lashkar-e-Taiba plotting terror against New
Delhi, as well as bilateral matters.
US President has assured India that the US is engaging
Pakistan on the issue of terrorism and shares India's concerns over terror
outfits like Lashkar-e-Taiba plotting terror against New Delhi.
He also expressed full support for India's request for
access to David Coleman Headley, a key plotter of the Mumbai massacre who is
currently in the US custody.
Obama's assurances on India's key concerns came at a
50-minute bilateral meeting Sunday at Blair House, the presidential guest house
across the road from the White House, as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh sought
the US support in tackling "the menace of terrorism".
"Terrorist onslaught in our region, if it persisted,
could affect our growth prospects," Manmohan Singh told Obama at their
first meeting since they met at the first state dinner of the Obama presidency
in November last year.
Reminding Obama that terrorism "was an issue on
which India and the US stood on the same side," Manmohan Singh focused on
the volatile situation in Pakistan and Afghanistan and stressed "how this
menace was tackled would determine the future of the South Asian region."
Briefing reporters on the talks, Foreign Secretary
Nirupama Rao rejected reports about disconnect between India and the US on
Pakistan-Afghanistan issues.
Rao said the prime minister took up the issue of Headley,
the activities of LeT and its founder-ideologue Hafiz Saeed, the suspected
mastermind of the Mumbai attacks and Ilyas Kashmiri, another Pakistan-based
terrorist leader linked with Headley.
He also pointed out continuing infiltration across the
Line of Control.
When Obama spoke about reducing tensions between India
and Pakistan, Manmohan Singh drew his attention to Islamabad's dilly-dallying
over the prosecution of those involved in the Mumbai massacre.
"Unfortunately, there was no will on the part of
Pakistan to punish those responsible for the terrorist attacks in Mumbai,"
Rao quoted Manmohan Singh telling Obama.
"This
is where the partnership of India and US could make the difference," said
Manmohan Singh.
Obama, according to Rao, told Manmohan Singh that India
has the goodwill and the understanding of the US in this regard. "Obama
fully understood our concerns about LeT and other terrorist groups in
Afghanistan and Pakistan" and said "the US is engaging Pakistan on
these issues."
Obama told Manmohan Singh "the US would be sensitive
to the issues that we have raised in the context of security assistance to
Pakistan" and assured him that the aid would be monitored and kept under
observation keeping India's interests in mind.
About cooperation between India and the US on counterterrorism,
Obama told Manmohan Singh that "they were working through the legal
system, on the issue of provision of access to David coleman Headley".
"He was fully supportive of our request for provision of such
access," said Rao.
Obama also told Manmohan Singh that he shared his vision
for South Asia. He said the US fully appreciated India's interests in
Afghanistan and recognised the enormous sacrifices that India has made to
stabilize that country and "expressed support for India's continuing contributions
in Afghanistan's development."
On India-Pakistan relations, when Obama said the US
favoured reduction of tensions between the two countries, Manmohan Singh again
stressed the need for Pakistan to take convincing action against those involved
in Mumbai attacks.
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