Foreign Ministers of India and Pakistan met in Islamabad on Thursday with an aim to restore trust and increase confidence in bilateral ties, with New Delhi seeking strong action against those involved in 26/11 terror attacks, based on the inputs provided by David Headley.
External Affairs Minister S M Krishna, who arrived in Islamabad on Wednesday on a three-day visit, met his Pakistani counterpart Shah Mahmood Qureshi and the two are understood to have discussed bilateral issues, including terrorism.
Both Krishna and Qureshi were accompanied by senior officials.
While Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao and Joint Secretary in-charge of Pakistan in the Ministry of External Affairs Yash Sinha were part of Krishna's team, Pakistan Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir and Spokesman Abdul Basit were part of Qureshi's delegation.
The talks are the second between the Foreign Ministers since the 2008 Mumbai attacks that left 166 people dead. They had earlier met in New York in September last year.
Krishna had on Wednesday asserted that "time has come" when Pakistan needed to act on the "overwhelming evidence" which was of "irrefutable nature" and maintained that "tirade" by jihadi leaders will not "help smoothen" the relations between the two countries.
Maintaining that the trial of seven accused in the Mumbai attacks case in Pakistan, including LeT operations commander Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, was moving at a slow pace, India has made it clear that it would like to see an expeditious and successful conclusion of the trial.
Krishna's