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India must
share evidence of blasts’ link: FO
NEW DELHI—Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told Pakistan on Monday
that weekend bomb blasts in Delhi were probably linked to foreign
elements, while Indian officials said Pakistan-based militant groups
could have been involved.
Pakistan officials responded by urging New Delhi to provide evidence of
the involvement of Pakistani militant groups in the blasts which killed
59 people, and promising to cooperate with the investigations.
Singh made the comments when President Pervez Musharraf called him to
offer condolences after Saturday’s blasts at two crowded markets, an
Indian Foreign Ministry statement said.
The blasts came as residents of the Indian capital shopped for sweets
and gifts ahead of Diwali, the biggest Hindu festival, on Tuesday, and
Eid-al-Fitr, the most important festival on the Muslim calendar later
this week. “The Prime Minister told the President of Pakistan that the
country was outraged at these heinous acts of terrorism,” the statement
said.
“The Prime Minister again drew the president’s attention to Pakistan’s
commitment to ending cross-border terrorism and said that we continue to
be disturbed and dismayed at indications of the external linkages of
terrorist groups with the October 29 bombing, and said India expects
Pakistan to act against terrorism directed at India”.
Although Singh did not name Pakistan, Indian foreign ministry officials
said he was referring to anti-Indian militant groups based in Pakistan.
Foreign ministry spokeswoman said Islamabad was ready to extend full
cooperation in the investigation. “The president has said we are ready
to cooperate in the investigations,” spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said. “But
evidence has to be shared with us. “In the absence of that it will be
just a claim. While pointing fingers on any Pakistan entity, they should
also share evidence with us”.
An obscure Kashmiri militant group, Islami Inqilabi Mahaz (Islamic
Revolutionary Group), claimed responsibility on Sunday for the attacks.
Indian security officials and analysts said the group was probably a
front for Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (Force of the Pure), which is
among several Islamist militant groups fighting Indian rule in Kashmir.
A Lashkar spokesman told Reuters on Monday the group was not involved in
the attacks and had no links to the Mahaz. Analysts, speaking before the
Indian prime minister’s comments, said the Delhi blasts would damage a
two-year peace process between India and Pakistan but were unlikely to
lead to a breakdown. In Delhi police said they were pursuing several
leads.
Many people were still trying to trace dead or missing relatives and
friends. In one morgue, three anguished families fought over the charred
bodies of two children — a girl of about eight and a boy of about three.
One family claimed the boy was theirs, another claimed the girl and the
third said the bodies were their missing son and daughter. “Why are they
doing this to me? Can’t a father recognize his own child?” sobbed one of
the men. They finally agreed to cremate the bodies jointly, and wait for
DNA testing.
While the city was slowly getting back on its feet, India’s robust
financial markets shrugged off the blasts, the main Bombay stock index
closing about 2.7 percent higher after a downward correction last week.
“Such security measures crop up from time to time, and by and large the
government has been able to contain it,” said Parthasarathi Mukherjee,
head of treasury at UTI Bank, Mumbai.—Agencies
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