Islamabad, July 20: British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw pursued his latest drive to end a seven-month deadlock between India and Pakistan over Kashmir today holding talks here with minister of state for foreign affairs Inamul Haq.
During the talks, Haq refused to budge from Pakistan`s position that it had done enough to end incursions into Jammu and Kashmir for India to resume bilateral dialogue. "Pakistan has conveyed a very clear message that it is willing to move forward. Pakistan has done a lot, now India has to move forward, and show that they acknowledge the problem," a government official said after the formal talks.
"It can`t be a one-sided affair only."

But Straw, who arrived earlier in the day after talks with Indian officials in New Delhi, has still not been able to secure a meeting with President Pervez Musharraf. He is due to fly back to New Delhi late afternoon.
British high commission spokesman Colin Hicks denied there was any snub. "There`s no problem as far as I`m aware of, the call with Haq has just gone overtime, they`re still having lunch," he said.
But official sources said that there was anger in the top echelons of government that successive rounds of international diplomatic mediation have still not produced what Islamabad wants most: ‘dialogue with India’.
Straw, on his third peace mission to South Asia this year, made clear in New Delhi yesterday that he would be telling Islamabad to permanently end the flow of militants in Jammu and Kashmir.
Bureau Report