Brown offers Pakistan and India help to fight militants

ISLAMABAD - British prime minister Gordon Brown has offered Pakistan and India help fighting militants during a visit to the …

ISLAMABAD - British prime minister Gordon Brown has offered Pakistan and India help fighting militants during a visit to the region aimed at easing tensions after last month's attack in Mumbai.

Mr Brown's visit coincided with a new dispute between the neighbours after Pakistan said Indian warplanes had inadvertently violated its airspace. India denied any incursion.

In talks with Pakistan's President Asif Ali Zardari in Islamabad and India's prime minister, Manmohan Singh, in New Delhi, Mr Brown offered both countries help in combating terrorism.

He also said he had asked them for permission for British police to question suspects arrested in both countries over the militant attack on Mumbai which killed 179 people.

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India has blamed the Pakistan-based group Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) for the assault. The same group was also linked to one of the suicide bombers who killed 52 people in London in 2005.

"Three-quarters of the most serious terrorist plots investigated by the British authorities have links to al-Qaeda in Pakistan," Mr Brown said.

In Islamabad, he offered British support in fighting militants, including bomb disposal and airport security help, and a £6 million (€6.7 million) programme to tackle the causes of radicalisation through education.

These measures would help to "break the chain of terror that links the mountains of Afghanistan and Pakistan to the streets of the UK", he said. He also offered India help with forensic investigation and airport security.

India has called on Islamabad to crack down on militant groups which it says were nurtured by the Pakistan military to fight Indian rule in Kashmir - among them the LeT.

"We want to normalise our relations with Pakistan," Mr Singh told a rally held during a state election in Kashmir. He added however: "There are some people in Pakistan who are always trying to launch such bloody attacks." - (Reuters)