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Jammu terror attacks: PM says talks to go on

Srinagar/New Delhi: With today's audacious terror attack in Jammu region resulting in nine hours of mayhem,  the BJP asked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to call off his talks with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif in

IANS Updated on: September 26, 2013 21:28 IST
jammu terror attacks pm says talks to go on
jammu terror attacks pm says talks to go on

Srinagar/New Delhi: With today's audacious terror attack in Jammu region resulting in nine hours of mayhem,  the BJP asked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to call off his talks with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif in New York Sunday. But  Singh vowed to go ahead with the meeting.






It was one of the worst terror attacks in recent times in Jammu and Kashmir, where a separatist campaign for which India blames Pakistan shows no signs of ending.

Chief Minister Omar Abdullah said the terrorists sneaked into the state from Pakistan in the last 12 hours. He hoped the killings would not derail the India-Pakistan talks on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.

An incensed Bharatiya Janata Party asked the government to cancel the Manmohan-Sharif talks.

"The PM is in a hurry to start a dialogue with Pakistan," BJP president Rajnath Singh said. "There should be no talks with Pakistan unless there is a conducive environment."

His colleague Sushma Swaraj tweeted: "No dialogue over dead bodies. Cancel your meeting with Nawaz Sharif."

The Indian prime minister, who was on his way to the US when he learnt of the attack, refused to oblige.

Manmohan Singh said that "such attacks will not deter us and will not succeed in derailing our efforts to find a resolution to all problems through a process of dialogue".

Conveying his condolences to the families of those killed, he said: "This is one more in a series of provocations and barbaric actions by the enemies of peace."

In an obvious reference to Pakistan, he said: "We are firmly resolved to combat and defeat the terrorist menace that continues to receive encouragement and reinforcement from across the border."

In Srinagar, Omar Abdullah said "it would be great injustice" if the India-Pakistan dialogue process got stalled following the terror attack in Jammu region.

He blamed the attack on "forces inimical to peace between India and Pakistan". He said it would be difficult to speculate if Thursday's attack had the backing of the new government in Pakistan.

The Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi also pressed for the talks.

"Our hearts go out in sympathy to the families of all those who fell victim to terrorist violence in Jammu today," a statement from the mission said.

"It is imperative that senseless act of violence do not deter us from pursuing a path to a better future for our peoples," it said.

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