Terrorist
attacks on World Trade Center, New York & Pentagon, Washington, DC
Transcript of Joint Press Conference by External Affairs Minister Jaswant
Singh and the US Secretary of State Colin Powell, New Delhi - October
17, 2001
Press Conference by Jaswant Singh, External Affairs & Defense Minister -
October 11,2001
Address
and Q&A by Ambassador Lalit Mansingh at the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars
- October 11, 2001
Ambassador Lalit
Mansingh's media interaction since the attacks on World Trade Center &
Pentagon
Media
availability with Jaswant Singh, India's Foreign Minister and Minister of
Defense and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld following their meeting at
the Pentagon - October 02, 2001
Media availability with
Jaswant Singh, India's Foreign Minister and Minister of Defense and
Secretary of State Colin Powell, following their meeting at the State
Department - October 02, 2001
Jaswant Singh,
External Affairs & Defense Minister's on Q&A, CNN - October 02,
2001
Jaswant Singh,
External Affairs & Defense Minister's interview on CNN - October 02,
2001
Prime Minister
Vajpayee’s letter to Mr. George W. Bush, President of United States of
America - October 01, 2001
Excerpts from Press briefing by Jaswant
Singh, External Affairs & Defense Minister’s after meeting with U.S.
President and U.S. National Security Advisor Rice - October 1, 2001
Jaswant Singh, External Affairs & Defense Minister's interview on PBS
NewsHour - October 01, 2001
Press Release issued by
External Affairs Ministry on UN Security Council Resolution on International
Terrorism - October 01, 2001
Ambassador
Lalit Mansingh's interview on FOX News - September 22, 2001
Press Release issued by the External Affair Ministry on missing Indians and
Persons of Indian Origin - September 19, 2001
Day of Solidarity -
September 18, 2001
The Embassy of India and the Indian-American
Community held an Interfaith Prayer meeting and a Candle light vigil at the
Mahatma Gandhi Memorial in front of the Embassy. The well-attended function
was held to mark the Day of Solidarity against terrorism observed by the
Government of India. (Press
Release)
External Affairs Minister
Jaswant Singh's interview on STAR TV - September 17, 2001
Press
Release issued by Ministry of External Affairs on Prime Minister's
telephonic conversation with U.S. President Bush - September
16, 2001
Prime
Minister Vajpayee's address to the nation on terrorist attacks on US
- September 14, 2001
Embassy Press Release on terrorist attacks in New York & Washington, DC
- September 13, 2001
President K. R. Narayanan's
letter to the U.S. President Bush on terrorist attacks on the United
States - September 12, 2001
External Affairs Minister meets with the media on tragic events in the
United States - September 12, 2001
Prime Minister Vajpayee's letter to President George W. Bush on attacks on
World Trade Center and Pentagon - September 11, 2001
Statement Jaswant
Singh after the meeting of Cabinet Committee on Security
- September 11, 2001
Statement by Jaswant
Singh, Minister of External Affairs and Defence on attacks on World Trade
Center and Pentagon - September 11, 2001
External Affairs Minister meets with the media on tragic events in the United
States
September 12, 2001
New Delhi
External Affairs Minister (EAM) said it was a grim tragedy that had
visited the United States of America. He said we had already offered our
deepest sympathy and condolences to the President, the Government, and the
people of the United States. He said that we clearly stood with the United
States of America and the international community in this fight against
terrorism. We had traveled this road long enough in India. India had a
commitment as a nation and people to fight this scourge and he wished to
convey this commitment to the people of the United States of America in
the midst of a great trauma.
EAM took the opportunity to express particular concern about the many
people of Indian Origin and the Non-Resident Indians who had made America
their home and who were working at the World Trade Center Towers. He said
two help-lines had been established in New York, and one more would be
established at Patiala House in the Ministry of External Affairs with
effect from 10 a.m. tomorrow, the 13th September. The telephone number of
this help-line was 3381500 and it would be manned around the clock. The
purpose of establishing these three help-lines was to provide such
assistance to anxious relatives and friends who had not so far been able
to get in touch with their near and dear ones. He said that he had been in
regular touch with the Permanent Mission of India in New York and our
Consulate General as well as our Embassy in Washington D.C. No member of
the staff of our missions and their families had been affected by these
incidents and they were safe. But this although a relief was not a
compensation. We did not look at these circumstances in a narrow fashion.
The fight against terrorism which is a scourge of our present times is not
directed against any one individual; it is directed against certain
manifestations, and fighting these manifestations, India had said clearly
yesterday – and he was taking this opportunity to repeat it, as indeed the
Prime Minister had also done – that in fighting this scourge we stand with
the United States of America, and the international community and shall
continue to do so, as we had done in the past, also.
Regarding the forthcoming U.N. General Assembly Session, EAM said that the
opening session of the UNGA was to commence with the election of the new
President of the UNGA, the Foreign Minister of the Republic of Korea, but
it could not take place yesterday. It was scheduled for 3 p.m today, but
just half an hour ago, we had heard that the Secretariat of the U.N. was
asked to be vacated. On account of this, it was extremely doubtful, he
said, that the opening session of the UNGA would take place today. He had
tried to speak to the U.N. Secretary General, and a time had been fixed
for this, only to be told that the Secretariat of the U.N. was being
quickly vacated. Hence, the conversation had not taken place.
In response to questions that followed, EAM made the following points:
We will provide whatever assistance required from India to the United
States to fight the menace of terrorism;
Terrorism is a crime against humanity – terrorist acts do not make a
distinction between one caste or one faith. The whole purpose of terrorism
is to hit at innocents. It was an experience that India has had – India
had traveled these gloomy and dark bylanes and roads of terrorism.
Terrorism is a regression into medieval malevolence. He did not recognize
terrorism as a manifestation of one particular faith – the noble faith of
Islam was not synonymous with terrorism. We would combat terrorism, and
conquer it.
It was a pure coincidence that the National Security Advisor of Israel
happened to be in New Delhi at the time of this benumbing attack. It is
not with Israel alone that India has this security dialogue.
Our offer of assistance, as mentioned in the Prime Minister’s letter to
President Bush, was unambiguous and unconditional. As far as sharing
details of security aspects (of any tangible programme of cooperation) in
public, this was ruled out.
India had taken the necessary steps to safeguard its security, both
internal and external; the Cabinet Committee on Security had met to make
an assessment of the steps already taken, and what needed to be taken.
For many years, we had known what Pakistan is doing- the spread of the
Taliban, and the training camps which were the centers of training of
terrorists. The whole world knew that these camps had been training
terrorists not only from Pakistan and Afghanistan, but also from diverse
parts of the world. These were facts. But it was factually incorrect to
assert that India had been demanding that Pakistan be designated as "this,
that, or the other". To therefore state that we should utilize these
present events to secure such an objective would miss the point. Our
target was clear – our target was terrorism and that is where we were
concentrating for now.
Asked whether the recent events were linked in any way to Osama Bin Laden,
EAM said that we would have to await the assessment of the United States;
in the face of this grim human tragedy we would not indulge in the game of
speculation.
It was not enough to address the issue of terrorism episodically, or just
talk about its symptoms; we had to go to its root and address the system
that promotes such symptoms; this was what President Bush had said, and
India had been saying for many years.
Asked whether the meeting between Prime Minister Vajpayee and President
Musharraf would be postponed, EAM said this would be dependent entirely on
the assessment we obtain from the office of the Secretary General of the
U.N. and from our Permanent Mission on the holding of the UNGA. Once the
assessment was with us, "we would take the correct step at the correct
time".
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