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Business News/ News / World/  Jadhav row: Spy games making peace with India difficult, says Hussain Haqqani
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Jadhav row: Spy games making peace with India difficult, says Hussain Haqqani

Former Pakistan diplomat Hussain Haqqani says Kulbhushan Jadhav's conviction for espionage would have been more convincing had it resulted from an open trial

File photo of former Indian naval officer Kulbhushan Jadhav who has been sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on charges of ‘espionage’. Photo: PTI.Premium
File photo of former Indian naval officer Kulbhushan Jadhav who has been sentenced to death by a Pakistani military court on charges of ‘espionage’. Photo: PTI.

Washington: Former Pakistan ambassador to the US, Hussain Haqqani, has criticised the death sentence awarded to retired Indian navy officer Kulbhushan Jadhav, saying Islamabad’s “spy games" are making it tougher for the two South Asian neighbours to even explore peace.

Haqqani said Jadhav’s conviction for espionage would have been more convincing had it resulted from an open trial. “But as with much about Pakistan, the trial’s short and secretive timeline may have more to do with internal dynamics than with the merits of the case itself," he wrote in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal.

Haqqani, who currently is the director for South and Central Asia at the Hudson Institute, a top American think-tank, said putting an Indian on death row was an easy way to scuttle momentum for new talks.

“At a time when India is also sliding into Hindu religious fervour, with vigilante violence threatening the country’s minorities over protecting cows that are considered sacred, Pakistan’s spy games can only make it tougher for the two South Asian neighbours to even explore peace, let alone find it," Haqqani said.

“(Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz) Mr Sharif had recently renewed calls for improving relations with India. Putting an Indian on death row is an easy way to scuttle momentum for new talks," he added. In his op-ed, the former Pakistani diplomat also alleged that Islamabad is unlikely to change its policy of using terrorist groups for its national security.

“Unwilling to change its policy of supporting jihadist groups as an instrument of regional influence, Pakistan’s military-intelligence combine wants to ensure the primacy of its worldview at least within Pakistan," Haqqani said

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Published: 20 Apr 2017, 10:09 AM IST
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