SAARC summit uncertain as India, others pull out in snub to Pakistan
KATHMANDU: A summit of South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) leaders set for Islamabad in November may be called off, as several countries have decided not to attend amid rising tension between arch-rivals India and Pakistan, officials said on Wednesday.
Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan and India have expressed their "inability" to attend the SAARC summit, a senior foreign ministry official in Nepal said.
India's foreign ministry on Tuesday announced its decision to skip the meeting, saying "increasing cross-border terrorist attacks in the region and growing interference in the internal affairs of member states by one country" had created an environment that was not conducive.
India has blamed Pakistan for a deadly assault this month on an army base in the disputed Himalayan state of Kashmir that has heightened fears of a new conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbours.
Pakistan, which rejects the accusations, called India's move to pull out of the SAARC summit "unfortunate".
A Bangladesh foreign ministry official said Dhaka had told Nepal it would not attend because of Pakistan's interference in its internal affairs.
The two countries have been in a diplomatic spat over executions by Bangladesh of people convicted of crimes during its 1971 war of independence from Pakistan.
Junior foreign affairs minister Mohammad Shahriar Alam said Dhaka had told Pakistan, which is chairing the meeting, of its "inability to attend the summit due to our engagements".
Rishi Adhikari, the foreign affairs adviser to Nepal's prime minister, said the Himalayan nation's government would discuss the matter with SAARC members so that there was "no long-term effect" on the regional grouping.
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