The show will go on but security off the field and fear in the minds of Indian players would decide the length of play at each of the venues in Pakistan. To maximise safety, there will be a nodal National Security Coordinator, to be appointed from the Pakistani side, assisted by a security expert from India.
The report, likely to be handed tomorrow, would spell out the security profile of each venue and suggest either one-dayers or Test matches for each. Karachi, therefore, could have a one-dayer instead of a five-day test match while Lahore would be the venue for a Test match.
Others on the high-security alert are Sindh, NWFP and Peshawar while Rawalpindi, Multan and Faisalabad are relatively safe for long play (read: Tests or a 3-day tour match). ‘‘The security-sensitive venues could either be blacked out or relegated to one-dayers depending on the situation’’, said sources closely associated with tour preparations.
(In Lahore, PCB chief Shahryar Khan ruled out shifting matches from Karachi and Peshawar but where certain assurances on ending violence and hostility as well as not allowing Pakistani territory to be used by terrorists to cross over into Kashmir had been underwritten. On the other hand, New Delhi had agreed to begin a reciprocal dialogue on Kashmir.
Pakistani spokesman Masood Khan said ‘‘there was a new momentum that must be maintained,’’ adding that the eight issues were interrelated and would have to have a ‘‘simultaneous track.’’ Analysts said Islamabad was making sure that New Delhi would not ignore Kashmir while making progress on all other issues.
As talks proceed, Khan said, India and Pakistan could expand the the dialogue to include discussions on a ‘‘nuclear-restraint regime.’’
The warm and friendly start of today’s process, albeit at a junior bureaucratic level, is neverthelesss a key element in the overall big picture, that also includes separate discussions that both New Delhi and Islamabad are holding with their respective Kashmiris.
The Proposals
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For example, the Centre is believed to have decided to hold its second round with the Hurriyat on March 22 in the capital. Back home deputy Prime Minister L K Advani hopes that his dialogue process can be soon expanded to include not only other Kashmiri leaders such as Yasin Malik and Shabir Shah, but also leaders from Jammu as well as Ladakh.
Here in Islamabad, President Musharraf is also believed to have given orders to Kashmiri terrorist groups to temporarily shut down their camps and move out of Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir (POK) and into the Gilgit-Baltistan areas. While these terrorist camps have not been dismantled as India desires, so as to put a complete end to cross-border infiltration, it gives him the breathing space to push the dialogue process with India.
Musharraf is also believed to have told the Kashmiri groups that they must convert their struggle into a ‘‘political’’ one. Significantly, intelligence agencies like the ISI, which have run the Kashmir ‘‘proxy war’’ for the last nearly 15 years, are also believed to have been told to withdraw from the jehad and let it be controlled by the Kashmiris themselves.
It is under this background that today’s resumption of the dialogue process is taking place. Foreign Secretary Shashank who will wrap up the round with his counterpart Riaz Khokhar is also expected to meet Pakistani Foreign Minister Khurshid Kasuri.