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After its recent downgrading of diplomatic and trade ties with India, Pakistan on Thursday, 8 August, reportedly turned down India’s demand of “unimpeded consular access” to Kulbhushan Jadhav.
According to a Hindustan Times report quoting sources, Islamabad has sent a letter to New Delhi, offering “consular access with conditions attached.”
Here is how the things have panned out so far:
In the backdrop of the Indian government’s recent decision to effectively revoke Article 370 of the Constitution and bifurcate the erstwhile state of Jammu & Kashmir, Pakistan has taken a series of steps.
On Wednesday, following a meeting involving Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan and the country’s National Security Committee (NSC), Islamabad expelled Indian High Commissioner Ajay Bisaria.
Pakistan also decided not to send its High Commisioner-designate to India.
Pakistan also announced that it would suspend the bilateral trade and review the "bilateral arrangements," alleging that New Delhi's move to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir was "unilateral and illegal."
Reacting to Pakistan’s decisions, India on Thursday termed Pakistan's announcement to downgrade diplomatic ties with it as an attempt to present an alarming picture to the world about relations between the two countries.
The Ministry of External Affairs said the Constitution was, is and will always be a sovereign matter and recent developments pertaining to Article 370 are entirely India's internal affair.
"Recent decisions by the government and Parliament of India are driven by a commitment to extend to Jammu and Kashmir opportunities for development that were earlier denied by a temporary provision in the Constitution," the ministry said.
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