Pakistan to allow India to question 26/11 suspects
Pakistan has agreed to allow an Indian team to question the 2008 Mumbai terror attack suspects being prosecuted there as the home secretaries of the two countries on Tuesday concluded their two-day talks on a positive note.
According to a joint statement issued at the end of the two-day talks, Pakistan has agreed to allow a team of Indian investigators to question some Lashkar-e-Tayyaba terrorists who are presently lodged in a jail in that country. The modalities and dates of the team's visit would be decided later, an official told IANS.
Home secretary G.K. Pillai and his Pakistani counterpart Qamar Zaman met in what is seen as a first step towards advancing the re-initiated peace process stalled after 10 Pakistani terrorists slaughtered 166 people in Mumbai in 2008, almost triggering an India-Pakistan war.
Among the issues the two sides discussed during the talks were the trial of the Mumbai terror suspects in Pakistan, the Samjhauta Express blasts probe, easing of visa norms, narcotics control and smuggling of fake Indian currency notes. India provided details of the probe into the Samjhauta Express blasts to a team of Pakistani interior ministry officials.
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