Pak Admits Violating 1999 Lahore Agreement With India, Nawaz Sharif Says “Was Our Fault”
New Delhi: Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif admitted on Tuesday that the country had “violated” the 1999 Lahore Declaration agreement with India, which he, and then Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee had signed. Indirectly referring to the Kargil misadventure by General Pervez Musharraf, he said, “It was our fault.”
“On May 28, 1998, Pakistan carried out five nuclear tests. After that, Vajpayee Saheb came here and made an agreement with us. But we violated that agreement…it was our fault,” Sharif told a meeting of his party Pakistan Muslim League (N).
The Lahore Declaration, a peace agreement between the two warring neighbours signed on February 21, 1999, called for maintaining peace and security and promoting people-to-people contact, among other steps. However, a few months later, Pakistani intrusion in the Kargil district in Jammu and Kashmir led to the Kargil War.
Starting in March 1999, Musharraf, who was the four-star General of the Pakistan Army, ordered the secret infiltration of forces into the Kargil district in Ladakh. A full-scale war erupted after New Delhi discovered the infiltration, and India won the war while Sharif was the Prime Minister.
A portion of Nawaz Sharif’s speech, aired by the state-owned Pakistan Television Corporation (PTV), has gone viral on social media.
As Pakistan marked the 26th anniversary of its first nuclear test today, Sharif said, “President Bill Clinton had offered Pakistan USD 5 billion to stop it from carrying out nuclear tests, but I refused. Had (former prime minister) Imran Khan like a person been on my seat he would have accepted Clinton’s offer”.
Sharif also stated that the case against him, which led to his removal from the office of Prime Minister in 2017, was false and alleged that it was orchestrated by Pakistan’s spy agency, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), to bring the now-jailed former Prime Minister Imran Khan to power.
On Tuesday, Sharif was re-elected “unopposed” as the President of the ruling PML-N party, six years after the three-time former Prime Minister was forced to quit the post following a Supreme Court ruling in the Panama Papers case.
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