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Trump says India, Pakistan can deal with Kashmir dispute on their own


US President Donald Trump said on Monday that India and Pakistan could deal with their disagreement about occupied Kashmir all alone, however he was there should they need him. 

Trump has recently offered to intercede among India and Pakistan on the challenged Himalayan district. New Delhi dismissed the offer while Islamabad invited it. 

He discussed the issue on the sidelines of a G7 summit in France with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who pulled back uncommon independence for occupied Jammu and Kashmir on August 5. 

Trump said Modi revealed to him that he had Kashmir leveled out. 

"We spoke last night about Kashmir, prime minister really feels he has it under control. They speak with Pakistan and I'm sure that they will be able to do something that will be very good," the US president told journalists.  
Modi, talking nearby Trump, said that all issues between New Delhi and Islamabad were "bilateral in nature".  
"All issues between India & Pakistan are bilateral in nature, that is why we don't bother any other country regarding them," Modi stated, as indicated by ANI. 

He said India and Pakistan were as one preceding 1947 and that he was "confident that we can discuss our problems and solve them, together".

The Indian head likewise said he has disclosed to Prime Minister Imran Khan that they should cooperate for the welfare of their two nations. 

Since India's choice to strip Kashmiris of their seven-decade-long extraordinary self-sufficiency through a hurried presidential request not long ago, Prime Minister Imran has over and again said that the Indian government's strategy in the Himalayan area is in accordance with the "ideology" of the Hindu patriot Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) party — said to be a parent association of the decision Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) — that trusts in "Hindu supremacy". 

He has also alerted the international community to a possible "false flag operation" by the Indian leadership to "divert attention from massive human rights violations" in occupied Kashmir.

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