India rejects Turkey offer to host multilateral talks on Kashmir

India says terrorism is the key issue

Erdogan, Modi
President Pranab Mukherjee (L) and Prime Minister Narendra Modi welcomes Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (middle) during the ceremonial reception at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on Monday. (Photo: PTI)
Aditi Phadnis New Delhi
Last Updated : May 02 2017 | 9:07 AM IST
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s suggestion that Kashmir be resolved through multilateral negotiations, was met with a polite rebuff from New Delhi which said the issue facing both Turkey and India was one of terrorism and that it was ready to talk to Pakistan on all bilateral issues, including Kashmir, thus, turning down Turkey’s offer of hosting mulatilateral negotiations. Ways to strengthen bilateral counter-terrorism cooperation, India’s claim to becoming a member of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) and a similar bid by Pakistan were among key issues that were understood to have been discussed  but India got few reassurances beyond continued cordiality in relations.

The spokesperson of the Ministry of External Affairs, Gopal Baglay, would not be drawn into a discussion on past stances on Kashmir taken by Turkey (like raising the issue of Kashmir on behalf of Pakistan in the Organisation of Islamic Countries) or even statements by President Erdogan who, during a visit to Pakistan in September last year, said that Turkey was fully with Pakistan in “support of the struggle of our Muslim brothers and sisters in Kashmir”.
India’s stated position is that a common position on terrorism by the two countries and the economic partnerships forged by businessmen on the two sides should be considered the high points of the visit.

Erdogan has just won by a thin margin, a vote legalising his de facto executive presidency along with a vast number of additional powers that currently belong to other state institutions, without introducing the checks and balances required to safeguard Turkey against a further authoritarian turn.  Internationally, Turkey is isolated and at odds with its western allies on a variety of fronts. The prospects for an improvement in Turkey’s relationship with the European Union and the US are assessed as being dim. The general opinion is that domestic politics will continue to shape Ankara’s foreign policy, making Turkey a somewhat unpredictable and capricious partner.
In the circumstances, Erdogan’s India visit is crucial: it is his second visit after 2008, and though President Abdullah Gul had come to Delhi in 2010, this is the first summit level meeting in New Delhi after a long hiatus and his first foreign visit after winning the April 16 vote consolidating his powers.

Business relations, however, were quickly established as the bedrock of the relationship.

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