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Solana in Islamabad for Latest India-Pakistan Peace Drive

Powel

ISLAMABAD, July 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - European Union Foreign Policy Chief Javier Solana arrived in Pakistan Saturday amid renewed international efforts to ease tensions between nuclear rivals India and Pakistan. Whereas India said it would voice concern to U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell over Washington's relationship with Pakistan, accused by New Delhi of instigating an Islamic rebellion in disputed Kashmir.

Solana, who came from New Delhi, meets with Pakistani Foreign Minister Inamul Haq and President Pervez Musharraf on the second leg of his South Asian tour, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

"The two sides will discuss political and security matters that include the present military stand-off," a Foreign Ministry official said as Solana went into talks with Haq.

The official said Pakistan wanted to end the impasse, which centers on alleged incursions into Indian Kashmir.

"What we could do, we have already done and now it is up to India to move forward towards peace," he said.

Solana told a news conference in New Delhi Friday, July 26, that he would urge Pakistan to do more to curb Islamic rebels allegedly sneaking into Indian Kashmir to carry out bloody raids.

"I will convey really that according to the leaders of India, cross-border terrorism has not disappeared," Solana said.

"It is true that it diminished, but it still exists, and I will discuss this with President Musharraf tomorrow (Saturday)."

Solana will move on to Kabul for talks with President Hamid Karzai on Sunday as part of a week-long tour of Asia and the Middle East.

On Monday he will be in Tehran for talks with Iranian leaders including President Mohammad Khatami and Foreign Minister Kamal Kharazi.

As Solana leaves Islamabad, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell is due to arrive in the region, first traveling to New Delhi and then to Islamabad for talks with Musharraf.

Powell said while en route to New Delhi on Saturday that he would press India and Pakistan to resume dialogue over Kashmir but expected no "breakthrough".

He said his main objective was to keep New Delhi and Islamabad from slipping back towards war and to urge each to take modest steps to improve the tense situation.

Solana, right, with Indian Foreign Minister

Meanwhile, Powell arrives Saturday in New Delhi on a lightning trip to the region to defuse fresh tension between India and Pakistan.

"We are not in the league where we say you are either with us or not with us because you are with someone else. An international relationship isn't conducted in that fashion," Indian Foreign Minister Yashwant Sinha told Star News television.

But he added: "So they (the Americans) have a relationship with Pakistan. To the extent that it impinges on our relationship, we will raise this issue with them."

New Delhi removed some sanctions against Islamabad in June after Powell's deputy, Richard Armitage, said Musharraf promised to end the infiltration of rebels into the Indian zone of Kashmir, wracked by a 13-year Islamic separatist insurgency.

The two countries have about a million troops massed along their common borders since the dispute was sparked by a deadly attack on New Delhi's parliament complex in December.

The fierce rivals came close to war following a massacre of Indian soldiers and their families mid-May, but pulled back from the brink under intense international diplomatic pressure.

Musharraf promised to crack down on independence seeking groups but India claims he failed to deliver.

Pakistan rejects India's claims of cross-border attacks and accused New Delhi of avoiding a dialogue to resolve the 54-year dispute over the Himalayan territory.

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw paid a similar visit last week, but returned home virtually empty-handed as he failed to meet either Indian Premier Atal Behari Vajpayee or Musharraf.

French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin is expected to visit New Delhi and Islamabad on August 2-3 on a similar peace mission.

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