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Advani asks US to force Pak to handover Dawood
Nellore (AP), Oct 27: Deputy Prime Minister L K Advani today said the United States should force `its ally` Pakistan to handover to India underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, allegedly involved in serial bomb blasts in Mumbai.
Nellore (AP), Oct 27: Deputy Prime Minister L K Advani today said the United States should force "its ally" Pakistan to handover to India underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, allegedly involved in serial bomb blasts in Mumbai.
Addressing a public meeting here this evening, Advani said Ibrahim was the "clueman" for investigation into the Mumbai serial blasts.
He regretted that despite repeated requests Pakistan was not repatriating Ibrahim.
US recently declared Dawood Ibrahim as a "global terrorist" based in Karachi.
On the latest confidence building measures announced by External Affairs Minister Yashwant Sinha, Advani said these initiatives were to improve people-to-people contact between the people of India and Pakistan. But if the government-level talks had to be resumed, Pakistan should not only stop cross border terrorism but also abandon its ISI centres operating in India, he said.
So far, The Indian army had smashed 200 ISI centres in the country. Despite this, Pakistan was continuing its "terrorist activities in many parts of the country and killing innocent people," Advani said.
If Pakistan was seriously interested in negotiations and stopped cross-border terrorism, India would then respond positively, he said.
For political reasons, the military rulers of Pakistan were not responding to the peace initiatives taken by India, he alleged.
Bureau Report
Addressing a public meeting here this evening, Advani said Ibrahim was the "clueman" for investigation into the Mumbai serial blasts.
He regretted that despite repeated requests Pakistan was not repatriating Ibrahim.
US recently declared Dawood Ibrahim as a "global terrorist" based in Karachi.
On the latest confidence building measures announced by External Affairs Minister Yashwant Sinha, Advani said these initiatives were to improve people-to-people contact between the people of India and Pakistan. But if the government-level talks had to be resumed, Pakistan should not only stop cross border terrorism but also abandon its ISI centres operating in India, he said.
So far, The Indian army had smashed 200 ISI centres in the country. Despite this, Pakistan was continuing its "terrorist activities in many parts of the country and killing innocent people," Advani said.
If Pakistan was seriously interested in negotiations and stopped cross-border terrorism, India would then respond positively, he said.
For political reasons, the military rulers of Pakistan were not responding to the peace initiatives taken by India, he alleged.
Bureau Report