Krishna puts Pillai on burner
A spat between two UPA heavyweights, external affairs minister S.M. Krishna and home minister P. Chidambaram, threatens to hijack Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s Pakistan initiative.
Mr Krishna on Wednesday locked horns with the home ministry over the handling of the recently concluded India-Pakistan foreign ministers’ talks.
A day after national security adviser Shivshankar Menon reiterated home secretary G.K. Pillai’s remarks on the Headley-ISI link, Mr Krishna hit back by saying Mr Pillai’s remarks on the eve of the Islamabad talks were “very unfortunate”. He felt Mr Pillai’s remarks presented the Pakistani side with an excuse to wriggle out of the talks. “Mr Pillai could have waited till I came back to issue a statement. Perhaps it would have been wiser if that statement had not been made just on the eve of my visit,” Mr Krishna said here in interviews to PTI and a TV channel.
“Everyone who was privy to whatever was happening in government of India ought to have known that the right kind of atmosphere from India’s side should have been created for the talks to go on in a very normal manner, but unfortunately this episode happened,” he elaborated.
The minister said he had discussed Mr Pillai’s comments with the PM, whom he had briefed upon his return from Islamabad last week. He said he was glad the home ministry had since announced the appointment of a spokesperson. In recent months, Mr Pillai had been briefing the media but on Tuesday the ministry appointed additional secretary (Naxal management) D.R.S. Choudhry “official spokesperson”.
Speculation is rife that the gag order was put on Mr Pillai under instruction from the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO). However, PMO sources refused to speak on the issue. The PMO is understood to have sought an explanation from Mr Pillai on the day his remarks were published in an English daily. That was also the day the Krishna-Qureshi talks were being held in Islamabad.
Comments
Mr. Krishna seems to have
Abhay Deshmukh
22 Jul 2010 - 12:07
Mr. Krishna seems to have suddenly found his tongue after his return to New Delhi. In his place, a sagacious Foreign Minister would have ticked off Mr. Quereshi for trying to deflect the blame from the accused to the accuser.
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