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‘No Kashmir mediation, India has been clear for 40 odd years’: Jaishankar on Trump offer

US President Donald Trump had last week, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, tried to play the peacemaker offering to help with ‘arbitration or mediation’ in the Kashmir issue.

‘No Kashmir mediation, India has been clear for 40 odd years’: Jaishankar on Trump offer

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar. (File Photo: IANS)

India has once again categorically rejected any scope for third party mediation between India and Pakistan on Kashmir.

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, who is on a three-day visit to Washington DC, asserted that India’s stand has been clear for decades and the two countries can discuss the issue bilaterally.

Jaishankar arrived in Washington on Sunday night from New York after attending the annual General Assembly session of the United Nations along with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

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“India has been clear for 40 odd years that we would not accept mediation… and that whatever has to be discussed has to be discussed bilaterally,” Jaishankar told reporters on when asked about US President Donald Trump’s mediation remarks on Kashmir.

“I’m clearing in my mind as far as I’m concerned. That’s what it’s about. My point is very simple. Whose issue (is this?). Mine. Who has to take the call? Me. If it is my issue and I have to take the call; I will decide whether I want somebody’s mediation or not. You can offer anything you like, but if I decide it is not relevant to me then it does not happen,” Jaishankar said.

“I am very clear in my mind. When people speak of it has gone up and down, where has it gone up and down? India has been very clear about it,” he said when asked about the frequent offer of mediation by President Donald Trump.

The External Affairs Minister said in half of his meetings on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session, the issue of recent developments in Jammu and Kashmir popped up.

“In terms of (issue of) Article 370, I would find it hard to quantify, but I would say maybe in about half my meetings it came up and maybe in half of my meetings it didn’t come up. It wasn’t that every guy who came to me came with that burning question,” he said.

Frankly, most of them were focused on the bilateral relations, he said, adding that even those who raised it, it was not necessarily the first issue of interest to them. “I think in the case of people who showed interest, it was more like, we have read about developments on Kashmir and it would be useful for us to hear from you,” he said.

Jaishankar further said he apprised the leaders about what was happening and why it was happening in Kashmir. The External Affairs Minister said that in many cases a lot of what he said was new to them.

“When you explain to them that Article 370 was temporary, when you tell them that it was part of the Constitution of India in which delegates from Jammu and Kashmir also took part, when you tell them that there was a provision within the Article for the modification which took place, and you explain to them that today major source of concern was the fact that Jammu and Kashmir is really not aligned with the rest of India on a whole set of issues and so therefore, how do you really run a country where one large state is misaligned with rest of the country.”

“It’s a very basic governance issue which people have ducked in the past. But because they ducked in the past doesn’t mean that everybody keeps ducking in the future. I think, once you walked them (world leaders) through this, most of them understood it and got it,” he said.

When specifically asked about the position of two countries – Malaysia and Turkey – on Kashmir, the minister said: “Obviously they have been given an understanding which clearly is very different from the facts on the ground”.

US President Donald Trump had last week, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, tried to play the peacemaker offering to help with “arbitration or mediation” in the Kashmir issue.

Trump said he had discussed Kashmir with the leaders of both India and Pakistan and also urged them to “just work it out”.

“With respect to Pakistan and India, we talked about Kashmir. Whatever help I can be, I said, I offered, whether it’s arbitration or mediation or whatever it has to be.”

He added he will “do whatever he can because they are at very serious odds right now and hopefully that will get better”.

Trump met Prime Minister Narendra Modi for a bilateral meeting on September 24 for 40 minutes, and a day earlier he met Pakistan PM Imran Khan.

India has categorically told the international community that the scrapping of Article 370 was an internal matter and also advised Pakistan to accept the reality.

While Trump has forged a close bond with PM Modi, a senior official said that the United States had concerns over the clampdown in the region.

Jammu and Kashmir was put under virtual curfew on 5 August when the Modi government scrapped the Article 370 and split the state into two union territories.

The Government has affirmed that restrictions in Kashmir are aimed at preventing Pakistan from creating trouble through proxies and terrorists.

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