CPI-M snubs Mamata Banerjee”s allegations over West Bengal train mishap

New Delhi/Kolkata, May 29 (ANI): Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) Polit Bureau member Sitaram Yechury on Saturday rubbished Railway Minister Mamata Banrejee”s charges against CPI-M with regard to Friday”s Gyaneshwari Express train mishap, asserting that she is covering up the lapses of her ministry into the incident.

Yechury said it is the duty of the Railway Minister to inform about the preliminary observations on the cause of the derailment.

“She has rather chosen to shield the actual culprits by suggesting that Maoists may not be behind the sabotage. It is clear that the Railway Minister is seeking to cover up the serious lapses of her leadership in the ministry and its failings in this tragic episode,” said Yechury.

“Banerjee is focusing on the civic elections in West Bengal, instead of the train mishap,” he added.

Earlier today, Banerjee demanded a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the mishap, and said the mishap was part of a political conspiracy hatched against her.

The CPM should not indulge in politics, let the state government speed up the probe,” she had said.

Banerjee also informed that the Railways would also investigate the incident independently.

“Let the investigation be complete, whoever is found guilty will be punished severely,” Banerjee said.

Attacking the ruling CPI-M in West Bengal , she alleged that the state government did not co-operate during rescue operations.

Banerjee said many questions still remained unanswered over the incident, but maintained that an explosion caused the sabotage of the rail tracks.

“This is an heinous crime,” she said.

Meanwhile, the death toll has risen to 120, as more bodies were pulled out from the wreckage of the mangled coaches.

Over 3000 security force personnel were reported to be involved in the rescue operations.

“It will take eight to ten hours more to clean up the track as the tracks are broken. The coaches of the train are lying beside the track but the tracks are damaged,” said Jaladhar Shastri, railway worker. (ANI)

India halts trains after 108 die, sabotage blamed, 1st Ld-Writethru, AS

SARDIHA, India (AP) Railway authorities canceled all night trains in an eastern Indian state Saturday after a passenger express train derailed and was hit by a cargo train, killing at least 108 people and injuring hundreds. The government accused Maoist rebels of sabotaging the tracks.

Railway workers and paramilitary soldiers used cranes to lift and pry apart train cars to pull out more bodies from the Jnaneswari Express, which was heading from Calcutta to suburban Mumbai when it derailed early Friday. “The death toll has reached 108 with some more bodies being pulled out from the debris today,” said Surojit Kar Purkayastha, state inspector-general of police.

More than 140 people with injuries were in hospitals in towns near the accident site, officials said, Railway officials said some bodies were still trapped between the engines of the two trains, which smashed together near the small town of Sardiha, about 90 miles (150 kilometers) west of Calcutta in West Bengal state. Rescue workers had not yet cut open a badly smashed train car where they expected to find still more bodies, Purkayastha said.

The work of removing the debris and pulling out the bodies was hampered by swarms of flies and the stench of corpses quickly decomposing in the humid heat, officials said. Railway authorities said they would not run any trains at night in West Bengal for at least the next four days, when Indian Maoist rebels have called a general strike.

The area is a stronghold of the rebels, known as Naxalites, who have launched repeated and often-audacious attacks in recent months despite government claims of a crackdown. Just 11 days ago, the rebels ambushed a bus in central India, killing 31 police officers and civilians.

A few weeks before that, 76 soldiers were killed in a rebel ambush the deadliest attack by the rebels against government forces in the 43-year insurgency. There have been dozens of smaller attack.

The government vowed once again to crush the Naxalites, who Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has often described as India’s biggest internal security challenge. But analysts say the government is hobbled by vacillating policies, poorly trained and ill-armed security forces and vast tracts of India where the government has little influence and where poverty has brought considerable support to the Naxalites, who claim to be fighting on behalf of the rural poor.

The rebels, who have tapped into the poor’s anger at being left out of the country’s economic gains, are now present in 20 of the country’s 28 states and have an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 fighters, according to the Home Ministry. “There is an absence of government.

There is an absence of competence in government. There is an absence of coherence in response,” said Ajai Sahni, a New Delhi-based analyst with close ties to India’s security establishment.

“The purpose of the Maoists is not to resolve grievances but to harvest them, and there are numerous grievances in the country to harvest.” In Sardiha, officials said the train tracks had been sabotaged but disagreed about exactly what had happened, with some saying it was caused by an explosion and others blaming cut rail lines.

A railway safety commission will meet Monday to examine all the evidence from the crash site to determine the cause of the derailment, officials said. Bhupinder Singh, the top police official in West Bengal, said posters from the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities, a group local officials believe is closely tied to the Maoists, had been found at the scene taking responsibility for the attack.

However, a spokesman for the group, Asit Mahato, denied any role, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. The Maoists seldom claim credit for their attacks.

Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee said the Sardiha area had been the scene of earlier Naxalite attacks, and that trains were under orders to travel slowly through the region in part so that drivers can keep watch for sabotaged tracks or bombs, and in part so the effects of a crash are lessened if a train does derail. ___ Associated Press writers Tim Sullivan, Ashok Sharma, Muneeza Naqvi and Nirmala George in New Delhi contributed to this report.

Suspected sabotage derails train in India; 71 dead, 12th Ld-Writethru, AS

SARDIHA, India (AP) Rescuers scoured the wreckage of a passenger express train that derailed and collided with a cargo train in eastern India, killing at least 71 people and injuring hundreds. The government accused Maoist rebels of sabotaging the tracks.

As night fell Friday, railway workers and paramilitary soldiers were using two cranes to lift and pry apart train cars in search of survivors from the Jnaneswari Express, which was heading from Calcutta to suburban Mumbai when it derailed about 1:30 a.m.

Friday. Railway officials said they expected the death toll to rise because bodies were still trapped between the engines of the two trains, which collided along a rural stretch of track near the small town of Sardiha, about 90 miles (150 kilometers) west of Calcutta in West Bengal state.

The area is a stronghold of India’s Maoist rebels, known as Naxalites, who had called for a four-day general strike in the area starting Friday. The Naxalites have launched repeated and often-audacious attacks in recent months despite government claims that it was launching its own crackdown.

Just 11 days ago, the rebels ambushed a bus in central India, killing 31 police officers and civilians. A few weeks before that, 76 soldiers were killed in a rebel ambush the deadliest attack by the rebels against government forces in the 43-year insurgency.

There also have been dozens of smaller attacks. On Friday, the government vowed once again to crush the Naxalites.

“The Maoists have done this work,” West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee told reporters in Calcutta. “All-out efforts will be made to free the state and the country from this danger.

” But analysts say the government is hobbled by vacillating policies, poorly trained and ill-armed security forces and vast tracts of India where the government has little influence and where poverty has brought considerable support to the Naxalites, who claim to be fighting on behalf of the rural poor. The rebels, who have tapped into the poor’s anger at being left out of the country’s economic gains, are now present in 20 of the country’s 28 states and have an estimated 10,000 to 20,000 fighters, according to the Home Ministry.

“There is an absence of government, there is an absence of competence in government, there is an absence of coherence in response,” said Ajai Sahni, a New Delhi-based analyst with close ties to India’s security establishment. “The purpose of the Maoists is not to resolve grievances but to harvest them, and there are numerous grievances in the country to harvest.

” In Sardiha, officials said the train tracks had been sabotaged but disagreed about exactly what had happened, with some saying it was caused by an explosion and others blaming cut rail lines. Bhupinder Singh, the top police official in West Bengal, said posters from the People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities, a group local officials believe is closely tied to the Maoists, had been found at the scene taking responsibility for the attack.

However, a spokesman for the group, Asit Mahato, denied any role, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. The Maoists seldom claim credit for their attacks.

Survivors described a night of screaming and chaos after the derailment, and said it took rescuers more than three hours to reach the scene, where the blue passenger train and red cargo train were knotted together in mangled metal. Sher Ali, a 25-year-old Mumbai factory worker, was traveling with his wife, two children and his brother’s family when they were jerked awake by a loud thud.

A moment later, their car was tossed from the track, he said. “My sister-in-law was crushed when the coach overturned.

We saw her dying, but we couldn’t do anything to help her,” said Ali, who had cuts on his head and arms. The rest of the family survived, though a 10-year-old nephew was badly injured and hospitalized.

Ali was unable to go to the hospital, though, because all his money was in his luggage inside the wreckage and he was afraid it would be stolen unless he kept watch. Soumitra Majumdar, a railway spokesman said 71 people were confirmed dead and nearly 200 people were injured.

Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee said the Saridha area had been the scene of earlier Naxalite attacks, and that trains were under orders to travel slowly through the region in part so the drivers can keep watch for sabotaged tracks or bombs, and in part so the effects of a crash are lessened if a train does derail. ___ Associated Press writers Tim Sullivan, Ashok Sharma and Muneeza Naqvi contributed to this report from New Delhi.

Violence rocks Telangana

Hyderabad, May 28 — Congress MP Jaganmohan Reddy was arrested on Friday afternoon after his much-hyped Odarapu yatra (consoling tour) led to violence in Telangana districts including Andhra capital, Hyderabad, in which one person was reportedly killed and twelve injured. Jagan, who is the only son of former chief minister, the late Y.S. Rajasekhar Reddy, and an aspirant for the CM’s post, was taken into custody by a large team of policemen from the coach of the Intercity Express train at Vangapalli station in Nalgonda district and brought back to Hyderabad. Later, he was released on bail. The MP who defied the party high command directive and went ahead with the trip seems to have antagonised not only politicians of all hues in Telangana but even a large section within the Congress party. Some party MLAs including former minister R. Damodar Reddy have demanded that Jagan be expelled from the party. “He clearly violated the party discipline and it appears he has decided to fight with the high command,” Damodar said. “His stubborn attitude has led to the death of one Telangana activist and large-scale violence in Warangal.” Earlier in the day, the railway station at Mahbubabad, 200 km from Hyderabad in Hyderabad-Vijayawada trunk route, where Jagan was to arrive to a planned grand welcome, witnessed battles involving Telangana activists and his supporters. Shouting slogans of “Jaya Telangana” and “Jagan go back”, they pelted stones at the followers of Jagan, who retaliated in a similar manner. Two local MLAs, Konda Surekha and M. Kavitha, who were present to receive Jagan were not spared. The guards of the two legislators escorted them out while firing at the crowd, reportedly killing a student, Praful Raju (20).

However, Moily refused to comment on the issue, only saying it will be handled as a law and order problem by the state government.

China express train forces airlines to stop flights

A new high-speed rail link between two inland Chinese cities has cut travel times so dramatically that all competing air services on the route have been suspended, state media said.

The suspension of flights between the gritty industrial city of Zhengzhou and Xian, home of the Terracotta Warriors, came just 48 days after the express railway began operations, the official Xinhua news agency said on Friday.

The 505 km (314 miles) railway, on which trains run at a top speed of 350 km per hour, has cut the travel time between the two cities from more than six hours to less than two, the report said. By contrast, flying takes just over an hour. Xian’s airport is also located at least an hour away by road from downtown.

Before the railway opened, Joy Air, one of the domestic airlines flying the route, managed to sell an average of more than 60 percent of seats for the route, Xinhua said.

Zhengzhou airport confirmed that all flights to and from Xian had now stopped, the report added.

China is spending billions of dollars on a network of high-speed railways, including one from Beijing to the country’s financial capital Shanghai, posing a challenge to airlines which had profited from China’s vast size and slow roads and trains.

“By then, 60 percent of China’s domestic air market will be affected by the high-speed railways,” Liu Chaoyong, general manager of China Eastern Airlines, was quoted as saying.

China Eastern last year agreed to sell 35 percent of Joy Air, in which it held 40 percent, to state-owned Aviation Industry Corp of China.
2012, China would have more than 13,000 km of high-speed rai

CPI-ML founder Sanyal commits suicide

Naxalbari (West Bengal), Mar 23 (ANI): Communist Party of India- Marxist-Leninist (CPI-ML) founder Kanu Sanyal reportedly committed suicide at his home in Naxalbari on Tuesday.

Sources said the dead body of Sanyal, who was not keeping well for the last few days was recovered his house in Naxalbari.

He was one of the key leaders behind the abortive Naxalite insurrection attempt by radical communists to initiate an “Indian revolution” by violent means.

78-year old Sanyal became a prominent figure in the opposition to land acquisition in Singur in December 2006.

On January 18, 2006, Sanyal was arrested with fellow agitators for disrupting a Delhi-bound Rajdhani Express train at the

New Jalpaiguri Railway Station in Siliguri, North Bengal protesting against closures of tea gardens in the region. (ANI)

Train drags man along track

A man has been dragged under a train in Adelaide’s northern suburbs.

Police think he was sitting on a platform at Womma station with his legs over the edge when an express train went through in the early hours.

He was struck and dragged under the train, suffering serious injuries.

He is now in the Royal Adelaide Hospital.

A pedestrian is in a critical condition in hospital after he was struck by a car at the corner of Frome and Grenfell Streets in the city just after 9:00pm on Sunday night.

Breakthrough found in stone pelting incident on Rahul Gandhi’s train: Police

New Delhi, Sep. 16 (ANI): Police on Wednesday claimed to have found a breakthrough in the stone-pelting incident on the train in which Rahul Gandhi was travelling from Ludhiyana to Delhi.

“We have been able to identify the place where it has taken place, it is a breakthrough. We have found glass pieces at the site and trying to collect scientific evidence. After this we will proceed towards identifying the accused person and then we will take legal action,” said V. Kamraj, inspector general, Rohtak.

On Tuesday, some miscreants pelted stones at the Swarn Shatabdi Express train near Gharaunda town when Congress General Secretary was returning from Ludhiana where he had gone to attend a party youth workshop.

Rahul had boarded the chair car of the train as part of government’s austerity drive.

Though no one was injured, windowpanes of C-2, C-4 and C-7 were damaged in the stone pelting. A stone even fell inside a coach.

Rahul Gandhi was travelling in the C-3 coach.

According to reports, the stone pelting took place between Karnal and Panipat stations in Haryana around 9.45 pm. (ANI)

‘Janata Khana’ in Railway to have national and regional cuisines

New Delhi, July 3 (ANI): All the zones in Indian Railways have been instructed to ensure availability of ‘Janata Khana’.

Presenting the Railway Budget for 2009-10 in the Lok Sabha today, Railway Minister Mamata Banerjee said that national and regional cuisines would be introduced in the catering by the Railways.

All railway zones have also been instructed to give priority to provision of good quality food, drinking water and toilet facilities and ensure cleanliness on trains and stations.

A comprehensive policy including strict monitoring mechanisms would be developed soon for achieving these objectives.

The Railways will also develop 375 ‘Adarsh Stations’ with basic facilities such as drinking water, adequate toilets, catering services, waiting rooms. These stations will also have dormitories especially for lady passengers, better signage and other basic facilities.

The Indian Railways has already identified 309 stations to be developed across the country.

In addition, the Railways will extend a helping hand to the persons with physical disabilities and old age people. Standard ramps, earmarked parking lots, specially designed coaches in each mail and express train, lifts and escalators would be provided in a phased manner. (ANI)

Punjab unrest: 25,000 passengers stranded in Jammu

Jammu, May 26 (IANS) Over 25,000 stranded passengers, including pilgrims to the Vaishno Devi shrine, were battling scorching heat at the railway station here Tuesday following disruption of train service due to the violent unrest in neighbouring Punjab.

Officials said the trains service will be resumed shortly as the situation in Punjab was returning to normal following violence Monday over the killing of a sect leader in Vienna. Curfew was imposed at many places in the only Sikh majority state of India after violent protests there.

According to officials, there are over 25,000 people, both tourists and Vaishno Devi pilgrims, stranded here.

“We are making all possible arrangements for them,” said Divisional Traffic Manager Ashok Sharma.

At least 19 trains to and from Jammu were cancelled following the Punjab unrest.

Sharma said the Banaras Express train was about to leave the Jammu Tawi railway station.

“We are waiting for signal from Punjab and then we will decide how many more trains can be moved today,” he said.

He said two trains reached Jammu in the morning after crossing Punjab during the night.

“After the services are restored, we will clear all stranded passengers within 24 hours.”

The railway authorities opened special counters to facilitate the cancellation of tickets. Some of the stranded passengers managed to leave Jammu by buses or private cars during the night.

Braving the scorching heat, many passengers are putting up at platforms or the waiting halls of the railway station.

“The guest houses around the area are all full and it is really very difficult to manage in this hot weather with children,” said Rajeev Sharma of Delhi who returned from the hill temple, Vaishno Devi shrine.

Om Prakash Aggarwal, also returning from the pilgrimage, is running short of money. He had to make his family sleep on a railway platform.

“We get limited money when we come on pilgrimage and now we are feeling hard pressed. For the first time in my life, I along with my children have slept on a railway platform.”

Sunil Prabhu, a tourist from Mumbai, had come to visit the shrine with his family – five elders and nine children. He had to cancel return tickets and was finding it difficult to get reservations on any train to Mumbai.

“My brother is standing in a queue for cancellation of tickets and I am here on enquiry counter trying to find out the next possible train that can take us back home,” Prabhu said.

Violence rocks Punjab over Vienna Gurdwara shootout

Phagwara/Jalandhar/Patiala/Amritsar, May 25 (ANI): Several parts of Punjab are experiencing and witnessing heavy bouts of violence in protest of a shooting incident that took place on Sunday in Austrian capital Vienna inside a Sikh Gurdwara.

Thousands of agitated protestors came onto the roads on Sunday and Monday, creating a law and order probelem in Patiala, Jalandhar, Phagwara and Amritsar. Protestors also indulged in sloganering.

Some of them smashed vehicles, damaged shops, burnt buses and forced shop owners to down shutters of their outlets.

In Patiala, shopowners were asked down the shutters of their business establishments. Protesters burnt tyres on roads to block movement of traffic.

In Jalandhar, a curfew had to be imposed after various incidents of violence.

Nearly 20 kilometres of road between Jalandhar to Phagwara were blocked and damaged by protesters despite the presence of heavy security.

The Indian Army’s help has been sought to bring the situation under control in the city. At some places, mediapersons have also been attacked.

In Phagwara, a large number of protestors blocked traffic.

At least three bogies of Kanyakumari-Jammu Tavi Express were set on fire and another train near Phagwara was attacked by agitated protestors on Monday morning.

The authorities have closed down the Jalandhar-Phagwara road to prevent an escalation of violence.

In Amritsar, protests were taking place in several parts. The Delhi-Ambala Highway was blocked.

According to railway authorities, rail services have been disrupted or suspended due to violence in Jalandhar, Phagwara and other parts of the State.

“Today, a Kanyakumari-Jammu Tawi Express train was attacked by protestors in which one AC and two general bogies of the train were torched.

No one has been injured in the incident. Rail services have been disrupted due to ongoing violence,” said Rajesh Khare, the Northern Railways PRO.

On Sunday evening, Jalandhar witnessed protests over the shooting incident in Vienna in which at least 11 people were reportedly injured in the afternoon.

Tension gripped Jalandhar as soon as news about the shooting on Sant Niranjan Dass, the head of Dera Sachkhand Ballan, reached the city.

Agitated followers turned violent and torched several vehicles.

Local authorities and witnesses initially said the assailants were from two feuding families, but later they said, it involved members of several rival Sikh temple in Vienna who had been at odds for several years.

According the Vienna police, it all started when six people burst into the temple in Vienna’s Rudolfsheim district during a religious service and attacked the preacher and other worshippers. One of the assailants was firing a gun and others wielding knives. In the ensuing violence, at least 11 people suffered gunshot and stab wounds before the assailants were subdued.

Meanwhile, the State government while expressing concern over the Vienna incident, has blamed miscreants behind the ongoing violence in Punjab.

“The Vienna incident is quite an upsetting incident. I don’t have words to express how tragic it felt to me. But various miscreants are behind the violence, which has been erupted here. These people do not want peace to prevail in the State,” said Punjab Chief Minister Prakash Singh Badal to a TV channel. (ANI)

Fear of Taliban dominates minds of people in Pakistan

Atari (Punjab), May 5 (ANI): India-bound passengers on board the India-Pakistan Samjhauta Express train commented on the dominance of Taliban in Pakistan.

Passengers said that the fear of Taliban is on the minds of the people in Pakistan.

“Fear of Taliban is lot in the minds of people in Pakistan. Both Pathans and Taliban were busy fighting. The government is not taking enough steps to prevent this and has been sitting quiet,” said Islamuddin, an Indian citizen who was returning from Pakistan.

Many passengers felt that both Islamabad and New Delhi should take steps to resolve disputes and jointly work to bring peace to the region.

“The governments of both the countries should jointly resolve the issue of Taliban,” said Ayesha Tabassum, an Indian, who returned after visiting her kin.

Pakistani forces battled Taliban fighters on Monday as the militants denounced the army and the government as U.S. stooges and said the peace pact would end unless the government halted its offensive.

The February pact and spreading Taliban influence have raised alarm in the United States about the ability of Pakistan — which has a vital role in efforts to stabilise Afghanistan — to stand up to the militants. (ANI)

Godhra riots: Gujarat Govt to declare 228 missing persons dead

Ahmedabad, Feb 28 (ANI): The Gujarat Government is expected to update the death toll of the 2002 Godhra communal riots, with the end of the waiting period of seven years.

As per law, any person declared missing for seven years, can be declared dead.

If the 228 persons declared missing since 2002 are declared dead, the death toll will go up from 952 to 1180.

“We have prepared a list of missing people and sent it to the revenue department, which would declare the missing persons as dead,” Additional Chief Secretary(Home) Balwant Singh said.he State Revenue Department would then send the details to the district collectorates for further processing.

Meanwhile, Ahmedabad collector Harit Shukla has informed that the final list of missing people from the police is awaited.

“Once we have the list, we will start the process of declaring them as dead, inform the civic authorities to prepare their death certificate and subsequently, compensation claims will be processed,” he added.

The 2002 tragedy took place when the Sabarmati Express train was attacked by 500 Muslims. Fifty nine Hindu pilgrims were burnt alive.

So far, the death toll stands at 952. Another 228 are reported missing, 2,548 injured, 919 women widowed and 606 children orphaned. (ANI)

Injured train passengers arrive in Kolkata

Kolkata, Feb 15 (ANI): A special train carrying over 35 passengers of accident-hit Coromandel Express arrived at Howrah Station on the outskirts of Kolkata on Saturday.

The south Chennai-bound Coromandel Express from Howrah derailed off Jajpur Road railway station in Orissa as it was speeding along the tracks on the night of Friday.

Meanwhile, senior Railway officials have constituted an inquiry team and an emergency centre to provide immediate medical aid to the injured and are also informing anxious relations about the whereabouts of their near and dear ones.

“We have received information about 32 injured passengers. But out of them, ten got treatment here We have sent the other injured through ambulances and other conveniences.Some of them have gone on their own,” said Debashish Chanda, an emergency officer.

A passenger who escaped without any serious injuries recalled his horrific experience.

“I was travelling in the B-2 compartment. Suddenly, we felt a violent jerk, and the train started crawling. All of us thought that the engine driver was applying emergency brakes. That time the train must have been travelling at the speed of around 80 kilometres per hour. The train stooped with a fierce jerk. When we came outside, we saw , several compartments of the train , derailed and the tracks were scattered in opposite directions,” said Subhankar Roy, a passenger.

About 1,500 passengers were travelling to Chennai in the Coromandel Express train. (ANI)

India ‘most welcome’ to help in Mumbai attacks probe: Pakistan minister

Islamabad, Jan.18 (ANI): Pakistan government on Sunday welcomed the idea of Indian investigators helping it to probe into the Mumbai terror attack case. It also asserted that the culprits behind the incident must be nabbed.

Pakistan’s Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik has stated that the Indian investigators would be “more than welcomed” to help it in its probe into the terror strikes while adding that all the “culprits” [behind the Mumbai attacks] “must be apprehended”.

Malik, however, reaffirmed its stance saying anyone found to be involved in the “heinous” attacks would be prosecuted under the (Pak) country’s anti-terror laws.

Malik’s comments came a day after he acknowledged that the evidence about Mumbai terror attacks given to Pakistan by India contained “leads and good clues”.

“All the culprits (involved in the Mumbai attacks) must be apprehended. Who will support such acts?,” Malik said to mediaperson in Lahore on Sunday after a meeting held to brief opposition PML-N chief Nawaz Sharif and his brother and Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, about Pakistan’s probe so far.

Speaking to the Paistan’ Geo News channel earlier, Malik reiterated its stance that Pakistan’s investigations into the Mumbai attacks were being conducted under the country’s laws and the government would not accept any foreign pressure in this regard.

Though Malik stated that no assistance would be sought from foreign countries but Indian investigators would “be more than welcomed” to help in the probe.

“Pakistan is very open and the inquiry officers have been bestowed with full powers to fulfil their task,” Malik said.

Malik also told the Geo TV that if India persisted with its demand for the extradition of Pakistani nationals allegedly linked to the Mumbai attacks, Pakistan would seek the handing over of persons involved in the 2007 bombing of the Samjhauta Express train.

“If the Indian demand for handing over the accused in the Mumbai attacks persisted, then the accused of the Samjhauta Express case might be asked for” by Pakistan, Malik said.

Replying to a question about Indian fears of Talibanisation of the region, he urged Indian authorities to share their findings in this regard with Pakistan and cooperate with it in its bid to exterminate terrorism and extremism from South Asia.

He also said Pakistan is part of the world community and a member of various international forums and is thus bound to fulfil its international obligations.

Malik told the media in Lahore that action had also been taken against outlawed groups like the Jamaat-ud-Dawah by the provincial government of Punjab. (ANI)