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October 09, 2006 20:22 IST
Pakistan on Monday said it had not yet received any evidence from India on the involvement of the country's intelligence agency ISI in the July 11 Mumbai serial train blasts.
"Pakistan has not yet received the evidence from India about the Mumbai Police allegations about ISI's involvement in the Mumbai blasts," Foreign Office Spokesperson Tasnim Aslam told reporters.
Asked about India's decision to share the evidence with European Union during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's [Images] current foreign tour, she said Islamabad has no objection to India sharing the evidence with any other country.
US has already said it has received the evidence from India in connection with Mumbai blasts, she said. The Mumbai Police, which investigated the July 11 train blasts, had pointed at the involvement of Inter-Services Intelligence in the bombings.
Asked if it was right on the part of India to provide evidence to other counties even after the two countries agreed to set up a joint anti-mechanism, Aslam said: "We have repeatedly told India, even before the agreement on institutional mechanism, that if it has any evidence it should share with us. By all means if they want share with EU and others, it is fine, but for us these are just allegations as long as we do not see evidence."
On the foreign secretary-level talks scheduled to be held in New Delhi to review the third round of the composite dialogue, she said the two foreign secretaries were in touch and the meeting was expected to be held after Ramadan.
About the claims made by Hurriyat leader Syed Ali Geelani that the Indo-Pak peace process will hurt the 'freedom struggle' in Jammu and Kashmir [Images], she said Geelani was entitled to his view. "We do not comment on views of individual leaders. What we hope to achieve through this peace process is a solution of Kashmir dispute acceptable to Pakistan, India and Kashmiris," she said.
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