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In what appears to be swift movement towards a thaw in relations, India s new Fore ign Secretary Sujatha Singh has

hinted at picking up the threads of dialogue with the new government in Islamabad, adding that India s neighbours would be her immed iate policy priority. The latest diplomatic overtures from a reluctant Indian establishment follow Pri me Minister Nawaz Sharif s repeated calls for rapprochement, which were once again repeated in Karachi on Thursday when the premier called for resolving outstandi ng disputes with India and boosting bilateral trade, investment and business. Singh, who has become the third woman to lead the Indian diplomatic corps, outli ned her foreign policy thrusts on Thursday. My immediate priorities would be in o ur neighbourhood. That is where our immediate interest lies. It has always been India s policy to develop peaceful and cooperative relations with Pakistan, she sai d. However, Singh cautioned that restarting the dialogue pre-supposes an environmen t free of terror and called for visible movement in the trial of those involved in the 26/11 attacks on Mumbai; and the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status for In dia before resumption of talks. New Delhi broke off peace talks with Islamabad after gunmen killed 166 people in Mumbai in 2008, an attack which India alleges was carried out by Pakistani mili tants. Talks resumed in 2011, with two rounds that focused largely on trade and visas, but relations soured again in January this year after six soldiers, from both co untries, were killed in exchange of fire along the Line of Control (LOC) in Indi an occupied Jammu and Kashmir. Talking about allegations of a video showing an alleged Pakistani soldier sharin g details of an encounter that led to the death of Indian soldier Saurabh Kalia, Singh condemned the mistreatment of soldiers in contravention of the Geneva con vention and said that If there are some new facts that have come to light, we wil l assess them and then we will decide on how to proceed further in taking this u p with the Pakistani government. Singh is the daughter of a former head of the country s intelligence bureau, with strong links to the ruling Congress party. She has not served in any of the Sout h Asian countries before, only serving as desk officer in charge of Nepal. She i s also known to be a strong advocate for women s rights and had threatened to quit the service altogether if she was superseded, as speculated, by her junior male colleagues.

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