Indian minister in Pakistan on rare visit

AAMIR QURESHI/ AFP

Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar arrived in Pakistan on Tuesday in the first such visit in almost a decade for a meeting of governments of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.

Jaishankar was among nearly a dozen leaders participating in the gathering in Islamabad, culminating with the main event on Wednesday.

It has been nearly a decade since a foreign minister from India has visited Pakistan amid frosty relations between the two nuclear powers.

Both sides have said no bilateral meeting is planned.

Pakistani prime minister Shehbaz Sharif and Jaishankar shook hands and had a brief exchange while Sharif was welcoming SCO leaders to a dinner he is hosting ahead of the conference on Wednesday.

The meeting of the SCO, a Eurasian security and political group formed in 2001 by Russia and China, is the highest-profile event hosted by the South Asian nation in years.

Chinese Premier Li Qiang is in Pakistan and seven more prime ministers of other member and observer states, including Russia's Mikhail Mishustin, were also due to participate in person.

The SCO also includes Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

The prime ministers of Kyrgyzstan, Tajikstan, Kazakhstan, Belarus and Mongolia arrived on Tuesday.

Sharif congratulated Belarus's prime minister on becoming a full member of the SCO.

The meeting will discuss cooperation in the fields of economy and trade. Observers believe the bloc seeks to counter Western influence in the region.

Pakistan's government announced a three-day public holiday in Islamabad, with schools and businesses shut and large contingents of police and paramilitary forces deployed.

The army was responsible for the security of the capital's Red Zone, the location of parliament and a diplomatic enclave and where most of the SCO meetings will take place, according to the interior ministry.

The threat alert has been high ahead of the summit, especially after the killing of two Chinese engineers on October 6, in an attack claimed by the separatist Baloch Liberation Army, and the deaths of 21 miners in an attack on October 11, for which no group claimed responsibility.

More from International