Pakistan envoy reaches Chandigarh to meet injured prisoner
May 06, 2013  14:43
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Pakistan High Commissioner Salman Bashir arrives in Chandigarh to see Sanaullah Haq, who was attacked by his fellow Indian inmate in a Jammu jail on Friday. Haq is in a deep coma, said doctors, adding that the 52-year-old is critical and on ventilator support. The Indian convict, who had allegedly attacked Haq, was sent to 7 days of police custody on Saturday.

Meanwhile, the death of Sarabjit Singh after a brutal assault in a Pakistani jail will cause a "setback" to the efforts to build relations with Pakistan and that there may be a "pause" in the engagement with it, feels External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid. India will have to have a "calibrated" approach towards Pakistan and work to ensure that its mindset vis-a-vis this country changes for the better, he said.

In an interview to PTI, Khurshid said the incident involving 49-year-old Sarabjit, who was severely injured in a Lahore jail, had agitated common people of India and it will take time to overcome.


Regrettably, Sarabjit's death came just few months after another distressful incident in which Pakistani troops killed two Indian soldiers, including beheading one, in a cross-LoC attack in Jammu and Kashmir, he noted.


"It is unfortunate that it (Sarabjit's death) has happened. We can't tone down our feelings that have been expressed publicly by ordinary people. And obviously when you feel a sense of hurt and distress, it takes a little time to overcome," Khurshid said.


"What something like this does is that it causes a setback to the momentum of work you have done to bring about greater and more meaningful relationship. I think, obviously, the recent events will do the same," he said when asked whether the Indian prisoner's death would have an impact on India-Pakistan relations.
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