"We will certainly take it up," External Affairs Minister S M Krishna told reporters on being asked whether India would raise the issue of Rana's revelations with Pakistan.
Rana, the Pakistani-Canadian accused in the Mumbai terror case, has claimed in documents submitted in a US court that his "alleged illegal acts of providing material support to terrorists --were done at the behest of the Pakistani government and the ISI, not the Lashkar terrorist organisation."
Forty-nine-year-old Rana, who runs an immigration service in Chicago with offices New York and Toronto, was arrested on October 3 for plotting to attack the Danish newspaper that published the controversial cartoons of Prophet Muhammad in 2005. The trial begins in Chicago on May 16 after being postponed in February at the request of Rana's lawyer.
Rana's disclosures have brought to the fore India's suspicion that Pakistan's government and the ISI had a role in the 26/11 attacks that left 166 dead.
"We are in constant touch with the Pakistan Government through our diplomatic channels," Krishna said to questions on the issue.
However, he made it clear that the dialogue process with Pakistan will continue.
"These are two different aspects. Peace talks will go on, cricket matches will go on and simultaneously our relentless efforts will continue to bring to justice all those responsible for the heinous crime against India in Mumbai," Krishna said.
"There are no contradictions in that position," he said when asked whether the revelations made by Rana would have an impact on India-Pakistan peace talks.
"I have said that both these things will have to go on... Just look at the Sharm el-Shaikh declaration," he said when asked about India's insistence that talks with Pakistan cannot proceed in the absence of credible action against perpetrators of terror acts in India.
On Rana's claim that the ISI and Pakistan government officials were masterminds of 26/11, the External Affairs Minister said, "Things will have to be verified... It is our hope and expectation that those responsible for the attacks have to be brought to justice. The US has publicly committed to that position."
On the steps taken by the Government to bring back from Chile Abdul Rauf, a person suspected to be a key conspirator in the hijacking of Indian Airlines plane (IC-814) in 1999, the Minister said, "Our intelligence agencies have already deputed personnel to go to that country and then make an assessment whether it is the same person who was responsible for the hijacking. If it is so, necessary follow-up action would be initiated."
Earlier, Chile's Ambassador to India Christian Barros said that after proving the identity of the person detained there, the Indian Embassy in Santiago must apply with all documents to seek Abdul Rauf's extradition from there.
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