Ashraf will be the most senior Pakistani to visit India since last April when President Asif Ali Zardari embarked on a similar pilgrimage and then had lunch with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. - File photo
Ashraf will be the most senior Pakistani to visit India since last April when President Asif Ali Zardari embarked on a similar pilgrimage and then had lunch with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. - File photo

JAIPUR: The spiritual head of a revered Muslim shrine in India where Pakistan's premier Raja Pervez Ashraf is set to visit at the weekend said Friday that he objected to the politician's pilgrimage.

Ashraf and his family are due to begin a day-long private trip on Saturday to the shrine of Sufi saint Hazrat Khwaja Gharib Nawaz in Ajmer Sharif, some 400 kilometres (250 miles) west of New Delhi.

The visit is Ashraf's first trip to India as prime minister and comes at a time of strained relations between New Delhi and Islamabad after tit-for-tat killings of soldiers at the tense border between the neighbours.

“I have decided to boycott the visit (to protest) the brutal killing of our Indian solders by the Pakistani army,” shrine spiritual head Zainul Abedin Ali Khan said.

“The incident has hurt Indians,” Khan added in a statement.

Tensions between the rival neighbours rose in January when six soldiers on both sides were killed in exchanges along the Line of Control (LoC) de facto border in Kashmir, a region claimed by both countries.

One of the Indians was beheaded, allegedly by Pakistanis.

Khan said he would also protest Ashraf's trip because of alleged ill-treatment of Hindus in Pakistan.

“There are incidents of atrocities on minorities in Pakistan and we have seen people from the Hindu community migrating to India on account of religious, financial and social persecution in Pakistan,” he said.

“I am against that, and to express my feelings, I decided to boycott the visit,” Khan said.

Ajmer Bar Association President Rajesh Tandon described the visit as “intolerable” and warned that lawyers would symbolically cleanse the road on which the Pakistani leader travelled to mark their protest.

“This is intolerable for an Indian because of the beheading of our soldier at the LoC,” Tandon said.

Ashraf will be the most senior Pakistani to visit India since last April when President Asif Ali Zardari embarked on a similar pilgrimage and then had lunch with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

While media reports said Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid will host lunch for Ashraf, Yashwant Sinha, a Hindu nationalist leader from India's main opposition BJP party on Friday urged New Delhi not to hold official talks with him.

Opinion

Editorial

Tough talks
Updated 16 Apr, 2024

Tough talks

The key to unlocking fresh IMF funds lies in convincing the lender that Pakistan is now ready to undertake real reforms.
Caught unawares
Updated 16 Apr, 2024

Caught unawares

The government must prioritise the upgrading of infrastructure to withstand extreme weather.
Going off track
16 Apr, 2024

Going off track

LIKE many other state-owned enterprises in the country, Pakistan Railways is unable to deliver, while haemorrhaging...
Iran’s counterstrike
Updated 15 Apr, 2024

Iran’s counterstrike

Israel, by attacking Iran’s diplomatic facilities and violating Syrian airspace, is largely responsible for this dangerous situation.
Opposition alliance
15 Apr, 2024

Opposition alliance

AFTER the customary Ramazan interlude, political activity has resumed as usual. A ‘grand’ opposition alliance ...
On the margins
15 Apr, 2024

On the margins

IT appears that we are bent upon taking the majoritarian path. Thus, the promise of respect and equality for the...