Indo-Pak Foreign Secretary talks.
New Delhi: Talks between the foreign secretaries of India and Pakistan have ended, and according to television reports, both sides have reportedly agreed to start the process for holding delegation-level talks.
Foreign Secretaries Nirupama Rao and Salman Bashir met each other along with their respective officials for a little over an hour at Hyderabad House here. Both are expected to address separate press conferences in the capital this afternoon.
Earlier in the day, Pakistan Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir said both Balochistan and Kashmir will be on the agenda for Thursday''s talks.
Bashir made these remarks shortly before leaving his for the talks venue. Bashir is leading a four member delegation in the talks to be held with Indian Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao.
He said he had come to New Delhi with the hope of taking talks with India on key bilateral issues, including Kashmir and Balochistan, forward.
Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Abdul Basit told ANI and other media that Islamabad will be discussing Kashmir in the talks as it saw the issue as being a core one.
The Indian side, it is believed focussed on the issue of terrorism, and what Pakistan is doing to stop such activities on its soil, while the Pakistan side reportedly put all issues of bilateral importance on the table, and expects New Delhi to respond positively.
Bashir is heading a five-member delegation. Five members led by Rao represented the Indian side.
After arriving in New Delhi, Bashir said: "It''s good to be back. I am here to bridge the differences and hope for a positive outcome."
A private channel had earlier quoted Bashir as saying that "Pakistan has no fixed agenda. Just looking for a way forward for the talks."
Bashir also said he would discuss any issue, including terror.
During his stay, Bashir is also scheduled to call on External Affairs Minister S M Krishna and the National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon.
Earlier, speaking in Beijing, on Wednesday, Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi termed the February 25 Foreign Secretary-level talks between India and Pakistan as an ''exploratory'' meeting and insisted that Islamabad wants a meaningful dialogue with New Delhi.
Qureshi also recalled that India, through a joint communiqué, had agreed that acts of terrorism would not impede the process of dialogue between both nations.Qureshi said the ball is now India''s court, and the outcome the talks would largely depend on New Delhi''s response and approach.
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