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Karachi holds concert for
peace
India and Pakistan have fought three wars over the past five decades.
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) --A popular Pakistani rock band and Indian singers have
performed together at a concert in Pakistan to promote peace between their
nuclear-armed rival countries.
Sunday, April 20, 2003
The peace concert was held in Pakistan's largest city, Karachi, the scene of
several deadly terrorist attacks against foreign nationals and minority
Christians.
"We have come here to share love and promote peace," a popular Indian Punjabi
traditional folk singer, Anaida, told an audience of 2,000.
"We want to see peace, peace and only peace in Pakistan and India," she said.
Standing at her side, Salman Ahmad, the lead singer of Pakistan's hugely popular
rock band Junoon, said: "We are also for peace ... we are also for love."
In the past five decades Pakistan and India have fought three wars, two over the
Himalayan region of Kashmir, divided between the two but claimed by both in its
entirety.
They came dangerously close to a fourth war last year, when New Delhi blamed
Pakistan for plotting a December 2001 terrorist attack on India's Parliament
that killed 14 people. Pakistan denied the charge.
Over 61,000 people have been killed in Kashmir since 1989, when rebels began
fighting for the Muslim-majority region's independence from predominantly Hindu
India or merger with Islamic Pakistan.
Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee on Saturday repeated an offer for
immediate talks with Pakistan if it ends cross-border infiltration by Muslim
militants.
Pakistani Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed quickly responded by saying
"no cross border infiltration is taking place into Indian-occupied Kashmir from
Pakistan's soil." Pakistan has offered India talks without conditions.
CNN International
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