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Lists of N-facilities, prisoners swapped with India

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Lists of N-facilities, prisoners swapped with India


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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan and India exchanged on Thursday lists of their nuclear sites under an agreement barring them from attacking each other’s atomic facilities in the event of war, officials said.

The annual New Year’s Day exchange was established under a 1988 agreement.

The two countries have also set up a telephone hotline to prevent accidental nuclear conflict.

The lists were handed over to officers of the Pakistani and Indian High Commissions in New Delhi and Islamabad, according to a statement by Pakistan’s foreign office.

The two countries also exchanged lists of each other’s civilian prisoners under a 2008 agreement.

“The ministry of foreign affairs handed over a list of 526 Indian prisoners, including 50 civilians and 476 fishermen in Pakistan, to the High Commission of India in Islamabad,” the foreign office said.

“A similar list of Pakistani prisoners in Indian jails was handed over to High Commission of Pakistan in New Delhi,” the statement added.

According to the consular agreement, the two countries are required to exchange lists of prisoners in each other’s custody twice a year – on Jan 1 and July 1.

Arrests of fishermen are frequently carried out by both countries as the maritime border in the Arabian Sea is poorly defined and many fishing boats lack the technology needed to be certain of their precise location.

The fishermen often languish in jail even after serving prison terms, as poor diplomatic ties between the two states mean fulfilling official requirements can take a long time.

The lists were exchanged a day after at least two Pakistani paramilitary soldiers were killed in firing by Indian troops.

The Indian Deputy High Commissioner was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs over the incident, which Pakistan called “unprovoked.”

Published in Dawn, January 2nd, 2015
 
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