Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Zardari discusses relations and trade with US, Chinese delegations

KARACHI: President Asif Ali Zardari on Tuesday held separate meetings with delegations from United States and China and discussed bilateral matters, DawnNews reported.
A delegation of US Congressmen comprising Republicans and Democrats met with the president at the Bilawal House and discussed the Pak-US relations, regional situation among other issues.
The president later held talks with the eight member Chinese trade delegation.
The delegation having representatives from mining, railways, trade, banking and power sector exchanged views with the president on development projects being carried out in Pakistan.
Zardari invited the delegation to invest in the country and expressed the desire that Islamabad wanted to initiate development projects through public-private partnership.

India, Pakistan officials meet before SAARC summit



GAN, Maldives: Senior officials from India and Pakistan met in the Maldives Tuesday as they prepared for a summit of South Asian nations in the remote atoll of Addu, an official said.
Maldivian Foreign Secretary Ahmed Naseer said India’s foreign secretary Ranjan Mathai and his Pakistan counterpart Salman Bashir met during the meeting of senior officials, but declined to give details.
“They met, but I cannot comment on their bilateral matters and what they discussed,” Naseer told reporters after officials met to hammer out a declaration to be approved by their foreign ministers and at the summit.
Naseer said foreign secretaries also discussed greater trade cooperation among members of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) and said Pakistan’s decision announced last week to grant the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status to India had also figured in their talks.
However, Naseer said they had also decided that any trade concessions agreed within the regional grouping should be better than the existing bilateral trade arrangements.
However, he declined comment on Pakistan’s MFN offer to India, the biggest member of the grouping which accounts for a fifth of humanity in one of the poorest regions in the world.
Many smaller members of SAARC, which groups Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, have expressed concern that Indo-Pakistan tensions were hampering regional trade.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart Yousuf Raza Gilani are due to hold talks on the sidelines of the summit on Thursday.
The two prime ministers last met in March when Gilani accepted Singh’s invitation to watch the India-Pakistan cricket World Cup semi-final.
They last held formal talks at the 2010 SAARC summit in Bhutan.