India and Pakistan today discussed the dates and agenda for the proposed foreign secretary-level talks as Pakistan high commissioner Shahid Malik met foreign secretary Nirupama Rao here.Malik met Rao in response to an offer of talks made by the foreign secretary to her Pakistani counterpart Salman Bashir about a week ago. She invited Bashir to Delhi for talks and proposed two set of dates in this month."We discussed the possible agenda and the dates for the meeting... We have to find mutually-convenient time and date,"Malik told reporters after hour-long discussions with Rao.He said he would inform the Pakistan government about his discussions he had with Rao.Asked whether there would be resumption of the CompositeDialogue stalled after the Mumbai attacks, Malik refused topre-judge but said "we have agreed in the past that dialogueis the only way forward."  Noting that so many issues form part of the Composite Dialogue, he said, "these are issues which are of concern to Pakistan and India and attempt is to keep talking about the issues which are of concern to us."Replying to questions, Malik said Pakistan would like to discuss the Kashmir issue as also terrorism, about which his country has "concerns."All possible issues which are of concern to both India and Pakistan will be discussed in general," he said. Asked about Kashmir, Malik said Pakistan has been raising this issue with India at every possible opportunity and fora and would continue to do so."It is something we have been talking with India in the  past and we will continue doing that," the Pakistani envoy said.India has made it clear terrorism will be the focus of the foreign secretary-level talks but it will "enter into the discussions with an open and positive mind".Describing his meeting with Rao as a "useful and good", Malik welcomed Indian statement that it will enter the discussions with an "open and positive mind".India had suspended the composite dialogue after Mumbai terror attacks and refused to restart the process before it could see any concrete action being taken by Pakistan in punishing those behind the carnage.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING