Pakistan s Imran Khan throws down the gauntlet to Indian counterpart Narendra Modi

ISLAMABAD – Days after a top adviser showed support for trade ties between Pakistan and India, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said on Tuesday he would like to have a live TV debate with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi to resolve differences between the two countries.

“I would love to debate with Narendra Modi on TV,” Khan told Russia Today in an interview, adding that it would be beneficial for the billion people in the subcontinent if differences could be sorted out through debate.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“India became a hostile country so trade with them became minimal,” Khan said, stressing his government’s policy was to have trade relations with all countries.

Khan’s remarks follow similar comments recently by Pakistan’s top commercial official, Razzak Dawood, who, according to media, told journalists he supported trade ties with India, which would benefit both sides.

The prime minister said Pakistan’s regional trading options were already limited, with Iran, its southwestern neighbour, under US sanctions and Afghanistan, to the west, trying to recover from the war.

Pakistan shares strong economic ties with its northern neighbor, China, which has committed billions of dollars for infrastructure and other projects under its Belt and Road Initiative.

Khan’s interview came on the eve of a visit to Moscow, where he will meet President Vladimir Putin — the first visit by a Pakistani leader to Russia in two decades.

The two-day visit for talks on economic cooperation was planned before the current crisis over Ukraine.
“This doesn’t concern us, we have a bilateral relation with Russia and we really want to strength it,” Khan said of the Ukraine crisis.

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