http://www.rxpgnews.com/india/SAARC-stickers-for-50-journalists-from-each-country-_22100.shtml

SAARC stickers for 50 journalists from each country

Apr 2, 2007 - 8:24:29 PM
  Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama spoke about the need
for free flow of thoughts and backed an unhindered access of
journalists in the region.


By IANS, [RxPG] New Delhi, April 2 - SAARC foreign ministers Monday
took a defining step to promote greater mental connectivity in South
Asia by deciding to grant special stickers to 50 journalists from each
member country that will enable them to move freely across the region.

'They decided that 50 journalists from each country of the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation will be given SAARC stickers for
freer travel in the region,' Foreign Secretary Shivshankar Menon told
reporters at the end of the daylong meeting of foreign ministers who
finalized the agenda for the two-day SAARC summit that begins here
Tuesday.

The ministers directed immigration officials of each country to meet
within two months and flesh out the modalities of the SAARC sticker,
Menon said.

The visa stickers will be issued by the respective governments. 'The
decision will be that of the government,' he said.

In the afternoon, the South Asian Free Media Association -, which
concluded its two-day conclave Monday, had vigorously pushed for SAARC
stickers for 50 journalists from the mainstream media so that they
don't have to suffer cumbersome procedures of intelligence clearance
for visas.

In its resolution entitled New Delhi Declaration, the SAFMA also
demanded that ten journalists each from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh
should be allowed to regularly report from each country. There was,
however, no official word on it.

Earlier in the day, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee, who
took over as chair of the SAARC council of ministers, told a SAFMA
conclave that SAARC foreign ministers had decided to remove
restrictions before the next meeting of the council of ministers,
which is expected around November.

Hours after Mukherjee's assurance, foreign ministers cleared this
proposal much to the delight of journalists who have been pressing for
this for a long time.

'When you meet next, you will not have much to complain about,' Mukherjee said.

Mukherjee went even a step further and said that India would also
'unilaterally liberalise the visa process so that journalists can
travel freely in the region.'

The issue of free movement of journalists and media products in the
region - a longstanding demand of the SAFMA - was extensively
discussed by the ministers.

Pakistan Foreign Minister Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri, who also spoke at
the conclave, lauded SAFMA for promoting 'better understanding' in the
region and promised to work with India to enable freer movement of
journalists in the region. 'I will endeavour to work with the current
chair - to the best of my ability for this,' said Kasuri.

'We hope we will be able to achieve this,' Kasuri said. Bangladesh
foreign advisor in the interim administration, Iftikar Ahmed
Chowdhury, backed the demand for a freer travel regime for South Asian
journalists and underlined the need for promoting SAARC as an
instrument of development of the region.

Afghan Foreign Minister Rangin Dadfar Spanta called for freedom of the
media and greater coordination among journalists in the region to
fight the scourge of terrorism. 'Fighting terrorism needs more
cooperation among countries of the region. This won't be possible
without the support of a free press,' Spanta said.

Nepalese Foreign Minister Sahana Pradhan - the only woman to hold this
crucial portfolio in the region presently -lauded the Nepalese media
for playing a crucial role in brining about democratic change in her
country. 'Media has an important role in narrowing perceptions among
countries of the region,' she said.

Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama spoke about the need
for free flow of thoughts and backed an unhindered access of
journalists in the region.

Supporting a free movement of journalists in the region, Maldives
Foreign Minister Ahmed Shaheed called for more open dialogue at
various levels in the region. 'We should make SAARC a people's
movement,' he said.

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