[<<Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday said that Islamabad and
New Delhi must resort to dialogue to resolve all conflicts, including
Kashmir. “The best way to alleviate poverty and uplift the people of the
subcontinent is to resolve our differences through dialogue and start
trading,” he tweeted.>>]

https://scroll.in/latest/891363/imran-khan-calls-for-india-pakistan-dialogue-to-resolve-all-conflicts-including-kashmir

Imran Khan calls for India-Pakistan dialogue to resolve all conflicts,
including Kashmir
The Pakistan prime minister said this was the best way to alleviate poverty
in the subcontinent.

Imran Khan calls for India-Pakistan dialogue to resolve all conflicts,
including Kashmir
Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan | AFP

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Tuesday said that Islamabad and New
Delhi must resort to dialogue to resolve all conflicts, including Kashmir.
“The best way to alleviate poverty and uplift the people of the
subcontinent is to resolve our differences through dialogue and start
trading,” he tweeted.

On Monday, Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Narendra Modi had
written to Khan, saying that the way forward was only through constructive
engagement. However, unidentified Indian government officials told ANI that
Modi had merely written a congratulatory letter to Khan and that there was
no new proposal for dialogue.

Earlier, Imran Khan said his government would work to establish good
relations with all the country’s neighbours and hold talks to normalise
ties. “There is a need for peace and without it, we cannot improve the
country’s situation,” Khan had said in his first address to the nation
since being sworn in as the country’s 22nd prime minister.

To move forward Pakistan and India must dialogue and resolve their
conflicts incl Kashmir: The best way to alleviate poverty and uplift the
people of the subcontinent is to resolve our differences through dialogue
and start trading https://t.co/V2UkXp0WwS

— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) August 21, 2018

On Tuesday, Khan also thanked Indian cricketer-turned-politician Navjot
Singh Sidhu for attending his oath-taking ceremony on Saturday. Khan called
Sidhu, who has been hugely criticised for attending the ceremony and for
hugging Pakistan Army Chief General Qamar Javed Bajwa, “an ambassador of
peace”.

Khan said those opposing Sidhu’s actions were “doing a great disservice to
peace in the subcontinent”. Without peace the people of the two countries
cannot progress, he added.

Khan’s party, the Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf, won the most seats in elections
to the National Assembly last month. Khan was elected prime minister by a
176-96 vote in the Assembly on August 17.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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