India downgrades ties with Pakistan, halves mission staff

Wednesday 01st July 2020 05:41 EDT
 
 

The already stuttering India-Pakistan ties took another hit with India asking Pakistan to reduce its staff at the high commission by 50%, following expulsion of Pakistani officials for espionage and the subsequent intimidation of Indian diplomatic-consular officials at the hands of the ISI in Islamabad.

The last time India asked for a similar reduction of staff was on December 27, 2001, exactly two weeks after the Jaish-e-Mohammad staged an attack on the Indian Parliament. As was the case in 2001, the government said in a statement that Pakistani officials here maintained contacts with terrorist organisations. The downgrade decision may be read as a signal that India does not see much point in maintaining diplomatic pretences in the face of what it sees as hostile activities by Pakistani officials on Indian soil and physical abuse of its staff in Pakistan.

Official sources said following the government’s decision, India and Pakistan will both reduce the strength of their respective missions to 55 in the next 7 days. The mutually agreed strength until now has been 110. The government summoned Pakistan charge d’affaires Syed Haider Shah and told him that Pakistani officials had been engaged in acts of espionage and “maintained dealings” with terrorist organisations despite India's repeated concerns about their activities. The government recalled activities of the two officials “caught red-handed” and expelled on May 31as one example in that regard.

The attack on Indian Parliament had led to a nine-month long military mobilisation on the border with Pakistan. The Pakistan foreign office said it “rejects and strongly condemns the baseless allegations made by the ministry of external affairs as a pretext to seek 50% reduction in staff strength of the high commission for Pakistan in New Delhi”.

Pak’s behaviour not in conformity with Vienna Convention: India

Pakistan foreign office said, “Pakistan also rejects the insinuations of intimidation of Indian high commission officials in Islamabad. The Indian government’s smear campaign against Pakistan cannot obfuscate the illegal activities in which the Indian high commission officials were found involved in. The MEA’s statement is another effort to distort facts and deny the culpability of these Indian high commission officials in criminal offences.”

Bilateral ties were already downgraded with Pakistan having asked Indian high commissioner Ajay Bisaria to return after India’s decision to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir.

Sources said the situation had become untenable after the way in which Islamabad responded on June 15, by harassing and intimidating Indian officials. The situation came to a head the same day with the ISI abducting two Indian officials at gunpoint.

“While their officials indulged in actions that are not in conformity with their privileged status in the high commission, Pakistan has in parallel engaged in a sustained campaign to intimidate the officials of the Indian high commission in Islamabad from carrying on their legitimate diplomatic functions,” said the government in a statement.


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