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Islamabad: Pakistan says it is "constrained" to restrict the movements of Indian diplomats since India is doing the same to its diplomats in New Delhi.
Reporting what it says was "water-testing game", The News quoted unnamed officials as saying that henceforth "reciprocity" would govern the treatment meted out to the diplomats in each other's countries.
Reciprocity, however, has always been the norm in the diplomatic behaviour of the two neighbours towards each other - from attending diplomatic functions to expelling staff members on charge of spying, diplomatic sources say.
The new restrictions pertain to not leaving assigned cities without prior information to the host government.
Although the report did not mention it, the allusion was to Indian diplomat Deepak Kaul, who was roughed up and expelled on charge of spying earlier this month. He was alleged to have left Islamabad without informing the Pakistani government.
New Delhi denied this, contending that Kaul had informed the Pakistani authorities that he was going to the Wagah border to receive his family members who were to join him.
Indian diplomats here are being told not to move out of the federal capital without prior permission.
Islamabad was formally informed by New Delhi Thursday evening about similar restrictions imposed on Pakistani diplomats here, diplomatic sources told The News.
"Pakistan is constrained to take the matching action since India had been engaged in water-testing game with Pakistan, and Pakistan would like to make it clear to them that the reciprocity would be the buzz word in dealing with Pakistan," a source said.
Pakistan is in the process of appointing new diplomats in New Delhi to replace those who have completed their tenure.
Pakistan's counsellor in Washington, Syed Zulfikar Ali Gardezi, has been transferred to New Delhi where Muazzam Ali and his wife Leena Muazzam, both counsellors, have been transferred to the headquarters.
Leena's place will be taken by Riffat Masood, the SAARC desk director at the foreign office.
The report made no mention of any successor to Pakistan High Commissioner in New Delhi Aziz Ahmed Khan, who too has completed his term.
Meanwhile, a Pakistani newspaper has blamed Indian intelligence for a bomb attack aimed at Islamabad's envoy in Colombo that killed seven people about a week ago.
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The News quoted unnamed officials as saying that India engineered the Aug 14 attack on its high commissioner to Sri Lanka, Bashri Wali Mohammed, in a bid to sour the burgeoning military and economic ties between Islamabad and Colombo.
The Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), India's external intelligence agency, carried out the attack on Ahmed that killed, among others, the four Sri Lankan bodyguards of the diplomat, the daily said. The envoy escaped unhurt.
Mohammed, a former chief of Pakistan's Intelligence Bureau, had completed his tenure in Sri Lanka and is set to return home Monday. He was a retired colonel of the Pakistan Army.
News reports say the attack coincided with the landing of two shiploads of weapons for the Sri Lankan armed forces, meant to fight the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
According to the Pakistani officials, the high commissioner played a pivotal role in strengthening relations between Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
"India was not comfortable with his presence in Colombo and also perturbed over Pakistan's increasing clout in the region." The Newspaper quoted as source as saying.
"Pakistan and Sri Lanka are the first two countries of South Asia which have had free trade agreement (FTA). RAW wanted to sour Pakistan-Lankan relations through this attack," they alleged.
India has condemned the attack on the Pakistani diplomat that took place in the heart of Colombo when he was returning home after attending his country's Independence Day celebrations at the high commission.
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