"It is a very strange thing to say as it was decided here on December 9 that the dialogue will resume but then the Pathankot incident occurred and everything vanished into thin air," Aziz told Geo TV yesterday.
His remarks came in response to Indian defence minister Manohar Parrikar's statement that the window for dialogue with Pakistan was "slowly closing". Aziz said that if India continues to repeat the old allegation of terrorism when it comes to the negotiating table, they must remember that terrorism is a part of the composite dialogue that Pakistan proposes, Dawn reported.
"They say that they will talk if we (Pakistan) make some progress on terrorism, but we say that they (India) should talk on all issues including Kashmir," Aziz said. Aziz also said that Pakistan was "not desperate for talks and there is no restlessness on the Pakistani side for dialogue."
"The whole world agrees that India and Pakistan should have composite dialogue," Aziz said, adding that if the region has to see peace, it has to see co-ordination first.