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Narendra Modi congratulates Sushma Swaraj over her UN speech

| | Oct 02, 2015, at 06:52 am
New Delhi, Oct 2 (IBNS): Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi appreciated External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj's speech at the UNGA and said she has wonderfully highlighted India's contribution to UN.

Modi also spoke to Swaraj and congratulated her over the move.

"Just spoke to @SushmaSwaraj ji & congratulated her for the excellent speech at the @UN. A perfect articulation of key global issues," Modi tweeted.

"EAM @SushmaSwaraj has wonderfully highlighted India's contribution to @UN & shared India's vision of what UN must be in the 21st century. In her speech EAM @SushmaSwaraj has rightly emphasised on the need to end all forms of terror & make the world a peaceful place to live in," he said.

Modi said: "Fully agree with you @SushmaSwaraj ji, empowering the girl child is vital to bring about a change in society."

Giving a reply to Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj while addressing at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Thursday asked the neighbouring nation to give up terrorism before holding peace talks.

Referring to Sharif's four point peace initiative, Swaraj said: "Nawaz Sharif's four points are not needed. We need just one point which is to stop terrorism and then begin talks."

She said India was grateful to the UN for declaring Mahatma Gandhi birthday on Oct 2 as the international day of peace.

Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif proposed on Wednesday renewed peace talks with India, aimed at defining the relationship between the Asian countries ‘as one of cooperation, not confrontation.’

He said that one of his key priorities is to strengthen relationship with neighbouring India, to end the conflict that dates back to the independence of both countries.

“When I assumed office of the Prime Minister in June 2013, for the third time, one of my first priorities was to normalize relations with India. I reached out to the Indian leadership to emphasize that our common enemy was poverty and underdevelopment. Cooperation, not confrontation, should define our relationship,” he said.

“Yet today, ceasefire violations along the Line of Control and the Working Boundary are intensifying, causing civilian deaths including women and children,” he told the Assembly’s 70th annual General Debate.

Sharif also added that the issue of Kashmir can only be resolved if peaceful dialogue is renewed between India and Pakistan along with consultations with Kashmiris.

“Consultations with Kashmiris, who are an integral part of the dispute, are essential to evolving a peaceful solution. Since 1947, the Kashmir dispute has remained unresolved. UN Security Council resolutions have remained unimplemented. Three generations of Kashmiris have only seen broken, promises and brutal oppression. Over 100,000 have died in their struggle for self-determination. This is the most persistent failure of the United Nations,” he explained.

He suggested a four-step measure to be implemented as part of the new peace initiative.

He said, “One, we propose that Pakistan and India formalize and respect the 2003 understanding for a complete ceasefire on the Line of Control in Kashmir. For this purpose, we call for UNMOGIP's expansion to monitor the observance of the ceasefire."

"Two, we propose, that Pakistan and India reaffirm that they will not resort to the use or the threat of use of force under any circumstances. This is a central element of the UN Charter," he added.

He said, "Three, steps be taken to demilitarize Kashmir. Four, agree to an unconditional mutual withdrawal from Siachen Glacier, the world's highest battleground,” said the Prime Minister.

Turning to other issues, he also spoke about the repeated terrorist attacks Pakistan faces and underscored that his country is a victim of terrorism.

He said, “The global threat of terrorism cannot be defeated unless we address its underlying causes. Poverty and ignorance are part of the problem. Extremist ideologies must be opposed. But the narrative of the terrorists also has to be countered through the just resolution of the several instances of oppression and injustice against Muslims in various parts of the world."

Unfortunately, some seek to use the global campaign against terrorism to suppress the legitimate right of occupied peoples to self-determination,” he added.
 

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