India, Pakistan in water boundaries talks

Islamabad, May 17. IRNA — Pakistani and Indian defence officials on Thursday opened two days of talks on a long-running border demarcation dispute, officials said. The talks in the Pakistani city of Rawalpindi are focusing on Sir Creek, a 69 kilometers narrow strip of marshland separating India’s western border from Pakistan.

The dispute over Sir Creek has hampered the search for oil and gas and led to hundreds of fishermen being arrested.


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Both sides freed dozens of the other’s nationals from their jails as talks got underway. Peace moves began in 2004.

The delegation of the two countries will deliberate over a joint survey conducted recently in Sir Creek.

The two sides routinely arrest each other’s fishermen for alleged border violations.

The fishermen say they are often unsure whose waters they are in because of the dispute.

Last year in May, the two sides decided to do a joint survey of Sir Creek and adjoining areas to obtain information which would allow for better decisions to be made.

Sir Creek lies between the Indian state of Gujarat and the southern Pakistani province of Sindh.

Much of the land is either marsh or desert that neither side sees as being militarily important. It is also sparsely populated.

But this inhospitable terrain – famous on the Indian side for its high quantities of salt – was the scene of heavy fighting between India and Pakistan in 1965.

India says the boundary should be in the middle of the 100-km (60-mile) estuary. Pakistan says the border should lie on the south-east bank.

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