Tuesday, 28 May 2019

Modi didn’t invite Imran to swearing-in due to internal politics: Pakistan

New Delhi on Monday announced that it has invited leaders from BIMSTEC countries to Prime Minister Modi’s inauguration
File photo of Narendra Modi taking oath in 2014.
Pakistan has done whatever it takes not to welcome Imran Khan for Narendra Modi’s swearing-in on Thursday, saying the Indian Prime Minister’s “inside governmental issues” does not allow him to stretch out a solicitation to his Pakistani partner. The administration on Monday declared in New Delhi that it has welcomed pioneers from BIMSTEC nations to Prime Minister Modi’s introduction, forgetting Pakistan, which isn’t an individual from the territorial gathering.
The BIMSTEC (Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation) includes Bangladesh, India, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Bhutan and Nepal. Responding to reports that India has not welcomed Pakistan Prime Minister Khan to Prime Minister Narendra Modi‘s initiation, Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said a gathering for exchange to discover an answer for the Kashmir issue, just as Siachen and Sir Creek debates, would have been a huge measure as opposed to going to the swearing-in service.
“His (Prime Minister Modi’s) whole center (amid the decision battle) was on Pakistan-slamming. It was rash to expect that he can dispose of this account (soon),” Qureshi was cited as saying before sun-up news. “India’s inward governmental issues did not allow him to broaden a welcome,” he said.
In 2014, at that point Pakistan head Nawaz Sharif had gone to Prime Minister Modi’s swearing-in hung on May 26 in New Delhi when the pioneers of SAARC nations were welcomed. Addressing Geo News on Monday, Qureshi said Modi had praised Khan after he won the general decision a year ago and composed a letter also.

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