Ashok Sharma

Pakistan chief heads to India for low-profile trip

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NEW DELHI (AP) — Officially, Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari is just having a quick lunch with India’s leader on his way to visit a Muslim shrine. But Zardari’s trip to New Delhi on Sunday marks a milestone in the warming relations between the two neighbors.

Such are the pressures on the nuclear-armed rivals that even as they inch closer together, they cannot be seen as fully embracing.

Zardari can’t risk angering Pakistan’s hawkish army and its powerful anti-Indian Islamic groups by holding official talks with India. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh faces pressure of his own to keep some distance from Pakistan until it cracks down on anti-Indian militants.

A year ago, Pakistan Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani met with Singh during a World Cup cricket match, using the same cover employed in 2005 by then-President Pervez Musharraf for a meeting with Singh during an India-Pakistan cricket match.

The 2005 meeting led to talks on an unprecedented framework for peace between the two countries that later collapsed when Musharraf lost power.

Sanjaya Baru, Singh’s former media adviser, praised the informal trips, which allow the leaders to talk without any expectations or pressure to produce results.

“Each such visit and the ensuing dialogue will make it easier for both governments to walk down the road that Singh and Musharraf defined,” he wrote in The Indian Express newspaper.

Zardari’s trip to New Delhi, the first by a Pakistani head of state since that 2005 visit, is the most visible sign that the rivals have put the enmity that followed the 2008 terror attacks in the Indian city of Mumbai behind them and are working to strengthen economic and political ties.

Zardari is to have lunch with Singh and then head to the revered Ajmer Sharif shrine in India’s western state of Rajasthan.

All issues are on the table, Indian Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna said. But he was not sure how deep the discussion would be.

“After all it’s a private visit of Zardari to India. He is coming on a religious mission. I don’t know whether they would have time enough to go into details,” he said Friday.

Pakistani political analyst Hasan-Askari Rizvi said Zardari’s visit will help “keep the momentum going.”

Pakistani Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said the lunch will help promote “peace and prosperity in this part of the world, and we are looking forward for a constructive engagement between the two leaders.”

India and Pakistan have fought three wars, two of them over control of the disputed region of Kashmir, since being split into two rival nations at independence from India in 1947.

Peace efforts collapsed in 2008 when 10 Pakistan-based militants killed 166 people in attacks in Mumbai. India blamed the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group and demanded that Islamabad crack down on them. Just days before Zardari’s trip, the United States slapped a $10 million bounty on Hafiz Mohammad Saeed, the group’s founder, who operates openly in Pakistan, giving anti-India public speeches and appearing on television talk shows.

Relations have slowly improved in recent years, culminating in Pakistan’s pledge to give India “most-favored nation” trading status by the end of this year. The World Bank estimates that annual trade could grow to as much as $9 billion from $2 billion if trade barriers are lifted.

Pakistan’s commerce minister is visiting India a few days after Zardari’s trip to join his Indian counterpart in opening a “Lifestyle Pakistan” expo highlighting fashion, food and arts from India’s neighbor.

“I think the India-Pakistan bilateral relationship is looking up. I think there are a number of issues which ought to be resolved and I am sure mutual talks will eventually resolve those issues,” Indian Foreign Minister Krishna said.

Singh does not appear ready to reciprocate with his own informal trip to Pakistan — perhaps, as some commentators have suggested, couched in a visit to his boyhood home in the Pakistani village of Gah — unless there is real movement in talks between the two countries.

Singh said that when Gilani asked him last month when he would visit, “I said let us do something solid so that we can celebrate.”

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Associated Press writer Sebastian Abbot in Islamabad, Pakistan, contributed to this report.

Pirate threatens India after capture of 61 pirates

Indian captured dozens of Somali hijackers after they abandoned vessel under fire on Monday

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Pirate threatens India after capture of 61 piratesIn this photo released by the Government of India Press Information Bureau, Indian naval officers distribute food to the captured pirates aboard an Indian naval ship in the Arabian Sea, off the coast of Kochi, India, Sunday, March 13, 2011. The navy captured 61 pirates from a hijacked boat after a brief gunfight in the Arabian Sea, the military said Monday, March 14, 2011. (AP Photo/ Press Information Bureau) EDITORIAL USE ONLY(Credit: AP)

Five dozen pirates living on a hijacked ship serving as a roving pirate base jumped into the Arabian Sea on Monday after the Indian navy fired on the vessel in self-defense, the navy said Monday.

The navy captured 61 pirates fleeing the battle and the fire that broke out aboard the hijacked vessel. The battle is the latest example of the piracy trade’s turn toward increased violence.

A pirate in Somalia threatened Indian sailors and the government with targeted attacks in retaliation for the arrests.

The Indian navy said a patrol aircraft spotted the mothership Friday while responding to another vessel reporting a pirate attack. The pirates aborted the hijacking attempt and tried to escape on the mothership.

When the Indian ships closed in Sunday night, the pirates fired on them. The hijacked vessel caught fire when the Indian navy returned fire, the navy said.

The pirates had hijacked the Mozambique-flagged Vega 5 in December and had used it as a mothership. Indian sailors rescued 13 crew members from the Vega 5 Sunday night about 700 miles (1,100 kilometers) off Kochi in southern India, the statement said.

The pirates were carrying about 80 to 90 small arms or rifles and a few heavier weapons, likely rocket-propelled grenades, it said. The statement did not describe any casualties among the navy, the fishermen or the pirates in Sunday’s clash.

The pirates were being taken to Mumbai, India’s financial capital, to be prosecuted for attacking the Indian ships.

Piracy has plagued the shipping industry off East Africa for years, but violence and ransom demands have escalated in recent months. Pirates held some 30 ships and more than 660 hostages as of February.

A self-described pirate in Somalia who gave his name as Bile Hussein said the arrests will lead to “trouble” for Indian sailors and ships.

“They better release them, considering their people traveling in the waters, or we shall jail their people like that,” he said. “We are first sending a message to the Indian government of releasing our friends in their hands or else they have to be ready for their citizens to be mistreated in the near future.”

The Indian navy’s third anti-piracy operation this year followed the capture of 28 Somali pirates last month and another 15 in January. Both groups are to be prosecuted in Mumbai.

Indian warships have been escorting merchant ships as part of international anti-piracy surveillance in the area since 2008.

Several nations, including the United States, are prosecuting pirate suspects captured by their militaries. But other suspects have been released as countries weigh legal issues and other factors.

The prosecutions, the growth of criminal gangs participating in piracy and the ever-increasing ransoms have heightened confrontations.

Five Puntland security forces and two pirates were killed earlier this month during a failed attempt to rescue Danish captives taken from their hijacked yacht to a pirate stronghold in the semiautonomous northern region of Somalia.

Weeks earlier, four Americans on a hijacked yacht were killed by pirates under circumstances that are still unclear. Four U.S. Navy vessels were shadowing the captured boat at the time, and 15 pirate suspects were taken into custody after the gunfire.

The owner of a Bangladeshi-flagged ship that was held for more than three months said that the vessel and 26 crew members were released Monday.

Mehrul Kabir declined to say whether any ransom was paid for the release of the M.V. Jahan Moni, which was seized off the Indian coast while transporting nickel ore from Indonesia to Greece, but the media in Bangladesh reported the pirates were paid $4.2 million.

“All the crew members on board are safe,” Kabir told reporters in Dhaka.

Ashok Sharma reported from New Delhi, India.

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Plane crashes in India, 160 feared dead

The Air India flight from Dubai overshot the runway in Mangalore

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An Air India plane arriving from Dubai crashed Saturday morning after it overshot a runway while trying to land in southern India, and officials feared as many as 160 people on board were killed.

Television images showed smoke rising from the aircraft at the airport in the city of Mangalore as rescuers struggled to reach those inside.

Officials in the state of Karnataka said of the 169 people believed to be on board, only six or seven might have survived.

“This is a major calamity,” Karnataka Home Minister V.S. Acharya told CNN-IBN TV.

Firefighters were working to put out the flames, he said.

Seemant Singh, a police official at Mangalore airport, told NDTV that conditions at the airport were poor when the plane overshot the runway at about 6 a.m.