NEW DELHI - Pakistan is willing to give up its claim to Kashmir if India
agrees to a far-reaching self-governance plan for the Himalayan region, Pakistan
President Gen. Pervez Musharraf suggested Tuesday.
 Kashmiri earthquake survivors carry their children
suffering from pneumonia and acute diarrhoea in a hospital in
Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, December 4,
2006. [Reuters]
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While New Delhi and Islamabad have made little public
progress on settling their dispute over Kashmir, officials on both sides
privately say advances have been made in so-called "back channel" negotiations,
most of them between retired officials.
Musharraf's remarks on Tuesday provided a snapshot of what an eventual
solution could look like.
He told the independent New Delhi Television that Pakistan would agree to
greater autonomy or self-governance for Kashmir with New Delhi and Islamabad
jointly supervising the region. Both India and Pakistan claim all of
predominantly Muslim Kashmir.
Asked if Pakistan was ready to give up its claim, he responded: "We will have
to ... if this solution comes up."
The dispute over Kashmir lies at the heart of the rivalry between the two
nuclear-armed South Asian countries.
Two of their three wars since independence from Britain in 1947 have been
fought over Kashmir, and New Delhi accuses Islamabad of supporting an Islamic
insurgency in India's part of the region that has killed 68,000 people since it
erupted in 1989. Pakistan says it only gives the rebels diplomatic and moral
support, not material aid or training.
Despite the insurgency, India and Pakistan began a peace
process in 2004 that has seen tensions between the countries ease
considerably.