Indian PM to make Siachen a "peace mountain" (Agencies) Updated: 2005-06-12 15:39
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, on a visit to the Siachen Glacier which
has been the scene of bloody fighting with Pakistan, said on Sunday it was time
to convert the world's highest battlefield into a "peace mountain".
Singh is the first prime minister to visit Siachen, between 18,000 and 22,000
feet above sea level.
There has been no fighting on Siachen since 2003, when a ceasefire came into
effect between Indian and Pakistani troops. But thousands have died in the past
two decades with more soldiers killed by sub-zero temperatures, the high
altitude and accidents than enemy action.
An aerial view of mountains is seen around
Kargil, India, Saturday, June 11, 2005. The Indian Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh is on a three-day visit to the remote Ladakh district in northwest
Kashmir that began Friday to inaugurate two-power projects and to interact
with Indian soldiers at Siachen, the world's highest battlefield.
[AP] | "The time has come that we make efforts
that this battlefield is converted into a peace mountain," Singh, 72, told
troops stationed there, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, center,
interacts with Indian army soldiers as Indian army chief J.J.Singh, in
green and red turban, looks on in Leh, India, Saturday, June 11, 2005.
[AP] | A ceasefire has been in place in Siachen and along the rest of the Kashmir
border since 2003 as part of a gradual but steady peace process between the
nuclear powers, which have fought three wars since they were created in 1947.
Two have been over the disputed region of Kashmir.
The overall peace process began in earnest in early 2004. It has moved
slowly, but a recent meeting in New Delhi between Pakistani President Pervez
Musharraf and Singh went off well and has fed hopes of more progress.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Today's
Top News |
|
|
|
Top World
News |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|