India plans Kashmir conclave in April
Source: Reuters
SRINAGAR, India, April 14 (Reuters) - India will hold a meeting of Kashmiri political parties this month to find a solution to the dispute, the government said on Saturday, despite separatists staying away from two similar meetings in the past. The third "Kashmir roundtable", an idea mooted by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, will be held in New Delhi on April 24. The first two meetings -- in February and May last year -- were a non-event as mainly pro-Indian parties and groups attended them with the region's main separatists staying away. The separatists said Pakistan must be involved in any talks on the future of the Himalayan region. Militant groups fighting Indian rule in the Himalayan region also condemned the meetings. A string of attacks coincided with the May conclave in Srinagar, Kashmir's summer capital. "The third roundtable is yet another opportunity to representatives of political parties, ethnic groups and opinion leaders from all the regions to deliberate upon all issues," Kashmir Chief Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad said in the statement. "All of us have to discharge (a) historic role and contribute for cultivating peace in the state," he added. The roundtable is a process separate from the India, Pakistan peace talks which began in January 2004 and which, too, have not made much progress on the core dispute of Kashmir. Kashmir's main separatist alliance, the All Parties Hurriyat Conference, said it would take a final decision on Monday on whether it would attend the meeting. Officials say more than 42,000 people have been killed in the Himalayan region since a revolt against Indian rule broke out in 1989. Human rights activists put the toll at about 60,000 dead and missing.
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