The Media Line: More Than 100 Indian, Pakistani Leaders Urge Modi and Sharif to Resume Dialogue  

More Than 100 Indian, Pakistani Leaders Urge Modi and Sharif to Resume Dialogue  

By Arshad Mehmood/The Media Line  

Over 100 prominent figures from India and Pakistan call for renewed dialogue to break the diplomatic deadlock.  

In a significant push for renewed engagement between the two nuclear-armed neighbors, more than 100 prominent figures from India and Pakistan have called on Prime Ministers Narendra Modi and Shehbaz Sharif to break the prolonged diplomatic deadlock and restore normal bilateral ties.  

The appeal was coordinated by O.P. Shah, a leading Indian peace activist and founder-chairman of the Centre for Peace and Progress, a civil society initiative advocating dialogue and reconciliation between India and Pakistan.  

As reported by numerous top Indian news organizations, this letter carries the signatures of 117 eminent personalities, including 61 from India and 56 from Pakistan.  

According to reports, the signatories have called for the revival of a structured and comprehensive dialogue process, proposing the negotiation framework used during the 2004–2007 period as a possible model for renewed engagement.  

The statement presents a detailed roadmap aimed at reducing tensions between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.  

It calls for the restoration of high commissioners, the reopening of key trade and transport links, including the Atari-Wagah border crossing, the lifting of restrictions on commercial airspace, and the easing of visa regulations to facilitate greater movement of families, students, and business communities.  

Emphasizing the human and economic costs of continued hostility, the signatories warned that prolonged confrontation between the two countries was undermining the future prospects of millions of young people across South Asia. The appeal stressed that the aspirations and well-being of nearly two billion people should take precedence over political differences and historical disputes.  

The initiative has drawn significant attention due to the stature of its participants. Among the Indian signatories are former Jammu and Kashmir chief ministers Farooq Abdullah and Mehbooba Mufti, Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, and former RAW (Indian top spy agency) chief A.S. Dulat, along with lawmakers, academics, and public intellectuals including Mani Shankar Aiyar, Manoj Jha, and Apoorvanand.  

Pakistani signatories include former foreign minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri, veteran diplomat Ashraf Jehangir Qazi, physicist Pervez Hoodbhoy, and civil society figures Beena Sarwar and Salima Hashmi.  

The appeal comes at a particularly sensitive moment in India-Pakistan relations following the escalation triggered by the May 2025 conflict between nuclear neighbors.  

Supporters of the initiative, however, argue that it builds on limited signs of renewed engagement, including recent Track-2 diplomatic efforts in Colombo and public remarks from sections of India’s political establishment highlighting the importance of maintaining communication channels.  

While both governments continue to face intense domestic political pressures and longstanding security concerns, the letter reflects a continuing push from civil society groups that dialogue and sustained engagement remain essential for preventing further escalation and unlocking regional economic opportunities.  

New Delhi and Islamabad have not yet issued an official response.


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