“That is because various strands feed into the other. The positivity feeds into each other. Process becomes sustainable. Realistically, you will have to have a holistic movement.”
Aslam said once there is the right atmosphere, the two sides can look into separating a specific track from other issues.
“When you have achieved that atmosphere, then it is possible to fast track something but when the whole process of bilateral dialogue is stalled and you are trying to move forward on one issue, it is always very fragile.” Pakistan missed a January 2013 deadline to give India Most Favoured Nation-status.
More recently, trade and bus services across the Line of Control were suspended over a week ago after a driver from the Pakistani side was arrested in Jammu and Kashmir on charges of trafficking narcotics.
Following the arrest, 27 drivers from the Indian side were detained by Pakistani authorities.
Asked if progress in Pakistan's prosecution of seven terror suspects charged with involvement in the Mumbai attacks was a stumbling block to resuming the composite dialogue, Aslam said neither Pakistan nor India is in a position to dictate terms to each other. “It does not happen,” she said.
Aslam raised the bomb attack on the Samjhauta Express cross-border train in which over 40 Pakistanis were killed and said: “What about Samjhauta? Have you forgotten about them? Are they less important. We have not heard anything on Samjhauta.