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Current impasse first test of intra-Kashmir trade: Pakistan

With intra-Kashmir trade suspended for week, Pakistan said it is keen on resolving impasse which it described as "first test" of arrangement on contacts and movement of goods between the two sides.

Islamabad: With intra-Kashmir trade suspended for a week, Pakistan on Friday said it is keen on resolving the impasse which it described as the "first test" of the arrangement on contacts and movement of goods between the two sides of the region.
"We have a very deep interest in the process, the crossing point, the meeting points between the divided Kashmiri families and subsequently the trade routes," Foreign Office spokesperson Tasnim Aslam told.
"They contribute to building an atmosphere where Pakistan and India and of course Kashmiris can move towards settlement of the Kashmir dispute which is part of the composite dialogue. This has been working well. And this is the first test of the arrangements," she said. Indian authorities seized over 100 kg of heroin concealed in a truck carrying nuts from the Pakistani side. Pakistan halted cross-border trade and bus services across the Line of Control after the seizure last Friday. While 21 Indian truck drivers are stranded in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir, 49 Pakistani drivers and trucks are stranded in Jammu and Kashmir. Aslam said there is a strong desire among Kashmiris for these contacts, which are "positive steps". "We want want intra-Kashmir trade to resume at the earliest," she said. It is not a good situation that truck drivers from both sides are stranded, she added. An offence like drug trafficking "is certainly a serious crime" that Pakistan takes seriously, she remarked. "But it is one side`s version against the other. How do we come to that definite conclusion that there were drugs and there were no drugs," she said. "We are in contact and both sides are discussing it and we have a strong desire to resume and we hope and believe that the other side shares that desire." India, she said, should provide conclusive evidence and send back all the drivers. "Is there any conclusive evidence that India can give to us about this person and by that I mean just showing some packets would not do," she said. "How is it linked to that particular driver and truck? That is one. Secondly, we have a stringent law on drug trafficking. Obviously it is not a nice situation to be dealing with the accusations. "If all the drivers and trucks come back, and we are given some evidence, we would better placed to investigate and take action (against) whoever is responsible, if indeed there is some evidence," she said.

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