Al-zakir
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Tuesday, March 10, 2009 02:12 AM GMT+06:00
Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf, considered the architect of the 1999 Kargil war, has warned that there could be more such conflicts if the key dispute and sore point Kashmir remains unresolved for long.
The retired Army General, who ruled Pakistan for nine years till last August after seizing power in a bloodless coup, acknowledged that there are a "lots of 'Mujahideen' in Pakistani society" and "freelance Jihadis" who have "emotional involvement" with the cause of Kashmiris.
Playing a peacenik as he faced a barrage of uncomfortable questions from a combative audience at a media event in New Delhi last night, he said the leaderships of the two countries need to take bold and affirmative decisions to address the core dispute of Kashmir.
He said India and Pakistan have caused "immense" damage to each other over the past six decades and they needed to overcome the burden of history and move towards peaceful relations by adopting realistic approach to addressing disputes.
During the marathon three-hour long interaction, he appeared agitated at times by the questions which touched issues like why terrorism continues to emanate from Pakistan, why Kargil happened, why Dawood Ibrahim is not being handed over and whether India can trust Pakistani army and ISI.
:The Daily Star: Internet Edition
Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf, considered the architect of the 1999 Kargil war, has warned that there could be more such conflicts if the key dispute and sore point Kashmir remains unresolved for long.
The retired Army General, who ruled Pakistan for nine years till last August after seizing power in a bloodless coup, acknowledged that there are a "lots of 'Mujahideen' in Pakistani society" and "freelance Jihadis" who have "emotional involvement" with the cause of Kashmiris.
Playing a peacenik as he faced a barrage of uncomfortable questions from a combative audience at a media event in New Delhi last night, he said the leaderships of the two countries need to take bold and affirmative decisions to address the core dispute of Kashmir.
He said India and Pakistan have caused "immense" damage to each other over the past six decades and they needed to overcome the burden of history and move towards peaceful relations by adopting realistic approach to addressing disputes.
During the marathon three-hour long interaction, he appeared agitated at times by the questions which touched issues like why terrorism continues to emanate from Pakistan, why Kargil happened, why Dawood Ibrahim is not being handed over and whether India can trust Pakistani army and ISI.
:The Daily Star: Internet Edition