New Delhi, July 17 (Inditop.com) With the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) staging a walk-out in parliament in protest against “capitulation” to Pakistan over cross-border terrorism, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Friday said action on terrorism by Pakistan should not await other developments, including resumption of the composite dialogue.

In a statement in parliament Monday within hours of his return from Egypt, Manmohan Singh said engagement is “the only way forward” to realise the “vision of a stable and prosperous South Asia”, but made it clear that any “meaningful dialogue” will depend on Islamabad fulfilling its anti-terror pledge “in letter and spirit”.

The prime minister also said that the timing, place and form of dialogue will depend on “future developments” and underlined that India was willing to go “more than half way provided Pakistan creates the conditions for a meaningful dialogue”.

“Whether, when and in what form we broaden the dialogue with Pakistan will depend on future developments,” Manmohan Singh told Lok Sabha about his meeting with his Pakistani counterpart Yousaf Raza Gilani at the Egyptian resort town of Sharm el-Sheikh Thursday.

“For the present, we have agreed that the foreign secretaries will meet as often as necessary and report to the two foreign ministers who will meet on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly,” he said.

“I hope that there is forward movement in the coming months,” he said.

“I conveyed to him the strong sentiments of the people of India over the issue of terrorism, especially the terrorist attacks in Mumbai,” Manmohan Singh said.

“I also conveyed to Prime Minister Gilani that sustained, effective and credible action needs to be taken not only to bring the perpetrators of the Mumbai attack to justice, but also to shut down the operations of terrorist groups so as to prevent any future attacks,” he added.

With the contentious formulation on delinking terrorism from the composite dialogue creating a controversy in India, the prime minister reminded Pakistan about the 2004 anti-terror pledge.

“As the joint statement says, action on terrorism should not be linked to the composite dialogue process, and therefore cannot await other developments. It was agreed that the two countries will share real time, credible and actionable information on any future terrorist threats,” he said.

“It has been and remains our consistent position that the starting point of any meaningful dialogue with Pakistan is a fulfillment of their commitment, in letter and spirit, not to allow their territory to be used in any manner for terrorist activities against India,” he stressed.

The prime minister’s statement echoed the 2004 anti-terror pledge Pakistan gave to India that formed the basis for the resumption of dialogue between the two countries that year – nearly three years after the attack on the Indian parliament in which Pakistan militants were allegedly involved.

The joint statement at the end of talks between Manmohan Singh and Gilani Thursday took many by surprise, with critics and opposition parties seeing in it a dilution of India’s stand on cross-border terrorism. Unlike in the past, the joint statement did not event mention the 2004 anti-terror pledge.

Manmohan Singh informed the house that India was reviewing the dossier of investigations into the Mumbai attacks provided by Pakistan. He also told parliament about Gilani’s assurance that Pakistan will do everything in its power to bring the perpetrators of the Nov 26 attacks to justice.

“He also told me that there is consensus in Pakistan against the activities of these terrorist groups, that strong action is being taken and that this is in Pakistan’s own interest,” Manmohan Singh said.

Members of the chief opposition BJP walked out of the house in protest against Manmohan Singh’s statement, saying it allegedly compromised India’s position on the sensitive issue of cross-border terrorism.

Soon after Manmohan Singh read out the statement on his meeting with Gilani and his recent visit to Egypt and France, Leader of Opposition L.K Advani of BJP said: “You have delinked terrorism and the composite dialogue. Why have you taken seven months to decide on this?”

“If the opposition wants, we can have a structural discussion. There is no provision in this house to seek clarification from the prime minister on his statement,” retorted Finance Minister and former foreign minister Pranab Mukherjee.

“We will have a structural debate, but as a mark of protest I would like my party to walk out to this capitulation,” Advani protested. And then the BJP members marched out of the Lok Sabha.

By rounak