India welcomes Narendra Modi's surprise Pakistan visit

Top Stories

Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi (R) shakes hands with Pakistan Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif in Lahore.
Indian Prime Minister, Narendra Modi (R) shakes hands with Pakistan Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif in Lahore.

New Delhi - Spurning official talks in the capital Islamabad, India's leader chose to make an intimate trip to Sharif's ancestral residence near Lahore on Friday, where he was celebrating his birthday and the wedding of his granddaughter.

By AFP

  • Follow us on
  • google-news
  • whatsapp
  • telegram

Published: Fri 25 Dec 2015, 11:00 PM

Last updated: Sat 26 Dec 2015, 7:05 PM

Prime Minister Narendra Modi flagrantly broke with diplomatic protocol to pay a surprise birthday visit to Pakistan leader Nawaz Sharif, betting his personal brand on his ability to revive a troubled relationship, Indian media and analysts said on Saturday.
Spurning official talks in the capital Islamabad, India's leader chose to make an intimate trip to Sharif's ancestral residence near Lahore on Friday, where he was celebrating his birthday and the wedding of his granddaughter.
A source present in the meeting said the leaders "chatted like old friends" as they ate vegetarian food, with the Indian premier telling Sharif, "Your sincerity is beyond doubt".
Modi's stunning decision to drop in for talks with Pakistan's leader - something ex-premier Manmohan Singh failed to achieve in ten years of power - was roundly welcomed in India where it was seen as a highly calculated personal gamble.
"Modi has made clear he is willing to risk political capital to make peace," the Indian Express newspaper said in a largely glowing editorial.
The visit, announced by Modi on Twitter, gave the appearance of being spontaneous, with Sharif's foreign affairs adviser not able to reach Lahore in time. However, a senior Pakistan official told AFP that security had been planned several days in advance.
While Indian media suggested Modi was the driving force behind the visit, a Pakistan official told AFP it was Islamabad's idea to arrange a meeting ahead of formal diplomatic talks set for January.
"The goal behind this meeting was to humanise the other side by arranging a visit involving close family members," said the official, adding that some of Sharif's cabinet members had opposed the visit.
Television polls suggested the majority of India's public welcomed the development while newspapers praised the decision to avoid the weight of expectation by staging an informal, unannounced meeting.
"Traditional build-up to an Indian PM's visit to Pakistan would have seen different interest groups bringing all kinds of pressure to bear," The Times of India said.
Yet members of the opposition Congress party denounced the "unpredictable" act saying it lacked gravitas, with some complaining that such an important meeting should not have been announced on Twitter.
In his 18 months in power Modi has shown huge confidence in his personal political skills, announcing economic policies himself and fronting a key state election campaign in Bihar - unsuccessfully - instead of fielding a candidate.
"Modi loves to spring surprises - he's disruptive, he's setting aside old taboos," Neelam Deo, a director at Gateway House think tank in Mumbai, told AFP.
"He's personalised diplomacy to an extent we haven't seen in India since (India's first prime minister) Jawaharlal Nehru in the 1950s," she said.
The last visit to Pakistan by an Indian prime minister was in 2004 by then leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who is credited with bringing about a thaw in relations with Islamabad.
Modi and Sharif have had a stop-start diplomatic relationship since the Indian premier's surprise invitation to Sharif to his inauguration in May 2014.


More news from