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Modi, Sharif had hour-long ‘secret’ meeting during Saarc 2014

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Modi, Sharif had hour-long ‘secret’ meeting during Saarc 2014
  • Prashant Jha, Hindustan Times, New Delhi
    |
  • Updated: Dec 01, 2015 01:31 IST
narendra-modi-shakes-hands-with-nawaz-sharif_af3ff986-9794-11e5-bc54-68b8564a9f80.jpg

Prime Minister Narendra Modi shakes hands with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif at the 18th SAARC Summit in Kathmandu, Nepal. (AFP)

A year ago all that the people saw was a quick handshake but away from TV cameras Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif held an hour-long secret meeting on the sidelines of the Saarc summit in Kathmandu.

Both the leaders shared their constraints while agreeing they needed more time and greater political space to move forward with public engagements. The meeting was facilitated by Indian steel magnate Sajjan Jindal, who is the brother of former Congress MP Naveen Jindal.

These revelations have been made by well-known television journalist Barkha Dutt in her debut book, This Unquiet Land — Stories from India’s Fault Lines. HT has exclusive access to the book, which is published by Aleph Books Company and will hit the stores on Wednesday.

Unknown to the media and certainly the public, both Modi and Sharif had found someone to “keep them connected even when things got difficult”, Dutt writes, describing Jindal as an informal messenger serving as a “covert bridge” between the two leaders.


Despite repeated attempts, Jindal did not return HT’s calls or messages. Ministry of external affairs spokesperson Vikas Swarup, too, did not comment.

During their first meeting when Sharif came to Delhi for Modi’s swearing-in — the two PMs decided to keep the reins of the relationship in their hands.

“However, they agreed that it could be useful to talk informally through a mutual acquaintance they both felt comfortable with.”

The acquaintance was Jindal, who hosted a tea party for Sharif after his meeting with Modi in Delhi. When Dutt went to meet the Pakistani leader at the Capital’s Taj Mansingh hotel, she saw Jindal escort Sharif’s son Hussain for lunch.

“It was no secret that Indian steelmakers, both state and private players, were looking to foster friendly relations with Pakistan; they needed this to happen so they could ferry iron ore from Afghanistan by road across Pakistan from where it could be shipped to ports in western and southern India,” Dutt writes. But, Jindal’s ties with Sharif, she says, appeared to have gone beyond that of a businessman with the head of a government – and the two had become “confidantes”.

The proximity was at play in Kathmandu, where the Saarc summit was held on November 26 and 27. Modi called up Jindal from Nepal and asked him to take the earliest flight to the Nepali capital. “Jindal was asked to discreetly reach out to his ‘friend’ across the border,” writes Dutt. The two leaders then met quietly “in the privacy of Jindal’s hotel room”, where they spent an hour together.

Modi – hinting at the upcoming Jammu and Kashmir elections – indicated while he was keen, “circumstances” did not permit him to reopen formal channels. Sharif spoke about “constrictions” imposed on him by the security establishment and how his “negotiating power with the army had been gradually whittled away”.

“This under-the radar encounter paved the way for Modi to openly reach out to Sharif two months later through a phone call that was positioned as an innocuous good-luck call for the World Cup,” Dutt writes.

Her account reinforces a well-known fact -- domestic politics often determines the course of the fragile bilateral relationship.


Dutt’s own assessment of Jindal’s role is that it did not involve negotiating “tricky matters of geo-politics”. “He was more like a covert bridge that connected them if either wanted to reach out to the other side sans protocol or publicity.” And, because Jindal’s role was off the record, it came with plausible deniability.

Dutt’s book is a personalised account that paints a broad canvas drawing from her journalistic experience. The place of women in India, Kargil war, Mumbai terror attack, Kashmir, national politics and its lead players and a society in flux – it covers it all.

Modi, Sharif had hour-long ‘secret’ meeting during Saarc 2014 | india | Hindustan Times
 
One question to lungians who appointed Raheel sharif and why not the other senior Generals who were next in line to become COAS ahead of RS.There is no difference in point of view about how to deal with india wether its Pakistani nation, Government or Army, so plz STFU and stop this nonsense that Pakistan govt and army have different point of view about india
 
Secret Modi-Sharif meet in Nepal: Did Barkha save the ‘exclusive’ for her book rather than report it?

Presuming that she is a fan of Bollywood, Barkha Dutt may have heard of Raj Kumar's advice for those living in glass houses: Never throw stones at others.

But, this is exactly what the journalist seems to have attempted in her debut book, This Unquiet Land — Stories from India’s Fault Lines.

In her as-yet-unreleased book, Dutt has claimed that while Narendra Modi and Nawaz Sharif were sulking at the 2014 Saarc Summit in Kathmandu in front of cameras, off it they had an hour-long meeting, arranged by Indian steel magnate Sajjan Jindal, the brother of former Congress MP Naveen Jindal.


Modi called up Jindal from Nepal and asked him to take the earliest flight to the Nepali capital. “Jindal was asked to discreetly reach out to his ‘friend’ across the border,” writes Dutt. The two leaders then met quietly “in the privacy of Jindal’s hotel room”, where they spent an hour together, says a Hindustan Times report that claims exclusive access to the book.

Modi – hinting at the upcoming Jammu and Kashmir elections – indicated while he was keen, “circumstances” did not permit him to reopen formal channels. Sharif spoke about “constrictions” imposed on him by the security establishment and how his “negotiating power with the army had been gradually whittled away”.

Prima facie, the revelation, if true, reminds us that when it comes to India-Pakistan diplomacy, like the elephant's proverbial tusks, the optics are different from what goes behind the veil of posturing. While the gullible public is fed a cocktail of lies and jingoistic rhetoric meant to foster animus, behind the smokescreen of hostility politicians smoke their peace pipes and empathise with each other's domestic compulsions. Obviously, a frosty handshake is just a cover for the friendly jhappi behind closed doors.

That more is hidden from the real stakeholders than what is revealed.

But, isn't Dutt herself guilty of the same subterfuge? If Sharif and Modi are guilty of holding back information, isn't the journalist, whose job is to bring it into the public domain, complicit in the conspiracy because of her opportunistic silence? In Twitter conversation sparked by the Hindustan Times teaser for her book release, Barkha has said the ‘exclusive’ about the secret Modi-Sharif meeting was hers (and that the paper was quoting from her book).

.@BDUTT .@prashantktm - dumb question, perhaps; but which of you is quoting the other person? advance congrats for #ThisUnquietLand

— Rohit Bansal (@theRohitBansal) December 2, 2015

@theRohitBansal @prashantktm ha ha prashant is quoting my book, and I am quouting his story on the book and other papers on that
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— barkha dutt (@BDUTT) December 2, 2015

.@BDUTT clarified! interesting you guys reserved it for #ThisUnquietLand and how!! @prashantktm

— Rohit Bansal (@theRohitBansal) December 2, 2015

The Saarc Summit was held in Kathmandu exactly a year ago. If Dutt was privy to the secret meeting, why did she not act in a manner expected of a journalist, which is to break the news on the TV channel she represents? Perhaps, the lure of keeping it for her forthcoming book may have overridden any moral and ethical temptation for sharing the story with her TV audience. After all, a story just generates ephemeral TRPs, but a trans-border controversy can turn a book into a bestseller.

When her name was linked with the Neera Radia tapes, Dutt was accused of sitting on a national scoop on how a corporate lobbyist was trying to fix appointments to the Union Cabinet. She then defended herself by saying maybe she didn’t see a story in it. But now, with this admission that she had this ‘exclusive’ information that Modi-Sharif’s meeting was anything but frosty, she could be accused of sitting on a story. The fact that she included it in her book suggests she was aware of the merit of the story? So was she sitting on it for her book?

With the publicity Barkha’s best-kept secret of the secret meeting has generated, the sales of the book will probably spike.

But, as a viewer who tunes in to NDTV, I would be more concerned about the sellout for a bestseller.

Secret Modi-Sharif meet in Nepal: Did Barkha save the ‘exclusive’ for her book rather than report it? - Firstpost
 

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