Pakistan to resume ‘friendship’ train service to India on Monday

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Indian passengers of Samjhauta Express train wave at relatives at Wagah Railway Station in Pakistan's eastern city of Lahore on April 28, 2018. (AN photo)
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Passengers from India with their belongings wait for Samjhauta Express train which was temporarily suspended after Pakistan shot down two Indian military aircrafts. (REUTERS)
Updated 03 March 2019
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Pakistan to resume ‘friendship’ train service to India on Monday

  • Samjhauta Express service was suspended on Thursday as the nuclear-armed neighbors engaged in their worst standoff in decades
  • Train will leave for Attari in India from Lahore Railway Station at 8 a.m.

LAHORE: Pakistan will resume the bi-weekly Samjhauta Express, commonly known as the Friendship Express, train service between India and Pakistan on Monday, three days after it was suspended as the nuclear-armed neighbors engaged in their worst standoff in decades.
Last week, escalation of hostilities between the arch-rivals, including aerial dogfights and heavy shelling along the border, nearly brought them to the brink of war. 

The neighbours have fought three wars, two of them over the disputed Kashmir region, which they both claim in full but administer in part. 
“The Samjhauta Express train will leave for Attari from platform 1 at 8 a.m. and the minister for railways has already announced the decision,” Railways spokesman Syed Ejaz Ahmad told Arab News on Sunday.
He said another train, the Thal Express, had already taken 600 passengers to India on Friday and returned the following day.
The Samjhauta Express direct service was established in 1976 and runs twice a week – from Lahore, Pakistan, every Monday and Thursday morning and from Delhi, India, every Saturday and Wednesday night.
On Thursday, the Pakistan foreign office said in light of ongoing tensions between Pakistan and India, operations of the Samjhauta Express had been suspended and would resumed “as soon as the security situation improves between India and Pakistan.” Following the Pakistani announcement, India also suspended the service on its side.
In 2007, two bombs exploded on board the Samjhauta Express bound from India to Pakistan, sparking a fire that killed at least 66 passengers and nearly sabotaging ongoing peace talks.
The train was first suspended on January 1, 2002 after an attack on Indian parliament in December 2001. Service resumed on January 15, 2004. Service was also suspended following the assassination of former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto in December 2007 to deny militants a "high-value target."


Pakistan PM to attend World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Switzerland next month

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Pakistan PM to attend World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Switzerland next month

  • The WEF meeting, scheduled to be held in Davos on Jan. 19-23, will focus on global challenges, public-private dialogue and cooperation
  • Government, business, civil society and academia leaders will engage in forward-looking discussions to address these issues, set priorities

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will travel to Switzerland next month to attend the 56th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF), Pakistani state media reported on Monday.

The WEF annual meeting, themed as ‘A Spirit of Dialogue,’ will be held from Jan. 19 to Jan. 23 in Davos, where world leaders from government, business, civil society and academia will engage in forward-looking discussions to address global issues and set priorities.

Prime Minister Sharif is expected to interact with global leaders and investors on economic challenges, regional and international issues and various opportunities for cooperation.

On Monday, Deputy PM Ishaq Dar presided over a meeting in Islamabad to oversee preparations for Sharif’s upcoming visit to Switzerland to attend the WEF meeting, the Radio Pakistan broadcaster reported.

“Dar instructed to maximize the engagements with the incoming Heads of States, Governments and senior leadership of economic, business and financial institutions,” the report read.

The WEF meeting program will be structured around key global challenges where public-private dialogue and cooperation, involving all stakeholders, is necessary for progress, according to the WEF website.

In addressing these challenges, growth, resilience and innovation will serve as cross-cutting imperatives, guiding how leaders engage with today’s complexity and pursue tomorrow’s opportunities.

Pakistani foreign ministry officials briefed the deputy PM about preparations for the WEF meeting, according to Radio Pakistan. The participants of Monday’s meeting in Islamabad discussed in detail the bilateral component and media engagements during the visit.

“He [Dar] further stressed that opportunities be explored to foster collaboration with private sector business entities,” the state broadcaster said.