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Powell Calls on India to Release “Political Prisoners” in Kashmir

Powell: We look to India to take further de-escalatory action as Pakistan makes good on its promises to end infiltration

NEW DELHI, July 28 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell called here Sunday, July 28, for India to release “political prisoners” in Kashmir before the insurgency-wracked state heads to the polls later this year.

Speaking to reporters ahead of talks with top Indian leaders, Powell also reiterated his call for India and Pakistan to take further action to end a half-year standoff in which one million troops have been deployed to the nuclear powers’ common borders, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

“” of rebels in Kashmir, he said.

He said that in separate meetings Sunday with Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee and Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf he would discuss “the tensions that exist between India and Pakistan and spell out further steps both sides can take to dispel the tensions.”

Powell said Kashmir’s election, expected in October, “can be the first step in a process that addresses Kashmiri grievances” and that “permitting independent observers and freeing political prisoners will be helpful” in making the polls “inclusive.”

Powell said that in talks late Saturday, July 27, with Indian Foreign Minister Yashwant Sinha he called in particular for the release of “those who could have a positive role in turnout” for the election, which most separatists have pledged to boycott.

The top U.S. diplomat said that in talks later Sunday in Pakistan he would call on Islamabad to make “every effort to avoid disturbing these efforts” for a free election.

India accuses Pakistan of fomenting the Islamic separatist insurgency that has left dead at least 36,500 people in Kashmir since 1989.

Powell’s deputy, Richard Armitage, said in June he had secured a pledge from Pakistan to end the infiltration of rebels into the Indian zone of Kashmir, a key condition set by New Delhi after a December attack on its parliament that sent tensions soaring in South Asia.

“The situation has improved considerably over the past month,” Powell said.

He said that while there has been a reduction in the flow of rebels over the disputed Kashmir border, “it seems clear that infiltration is continuing and we must make every effort to end it.”

New Delhi is hoping the Kashmir election will pass off peacefully, thereby easing Kashmiris’ criticism that India has not allowed its sole Muslim-majority state to choose its own leaders.

But two of the executive members of Kashmir’s main separatist alliance, the All Party Hurriyat Conference, have been detained this year: Yasin Malik and Syed Ali Gilani.

Another prominent moderate in the alliance, Abdul Gani Lone, was assassinated by unknown gunmen in May.

The Hurriyat has said it will not participate in the vote, amid widespread accusations that past elections in Kashmir have been rigged.

Sinha has already rebuffed calls for international monitors in the Kashmir election, but Powell held out hope India would accept “independent” observers not necessarily affiliated with any international body or foreign country.

 

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