 Pervez Musharraf, the former President of Pakistan, talks during a  public rally of his new political party, the 'All Pakistan Muslim  League' in Birmingham, England (File Photo)
Pervez Musharraf, the former President of Pakistan, talks during a  public rally of his new political party, the 'All Pakistan Muslim  League' in Birmingham, England (File Photo)Indian officials have confirmed that former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has been denied a visa. They did not give a reason.
Mr. Musharraf had been invited to speak at a seminar organized by business professionals in New Delhi.
 Several of Mr. Musharraf's supporters, who were planning to visit India  with him, were also denied a visa.  The former Pakistani military  ruler, who lives in Britain, is attempting a political comeback and  launched a political party in October. 
Foreign affairs  observers say that India wants to avoid providing a platform for Mr.  Musharraf's political ambitions, which they believe would be sending a  wrong message to the civilian government in Islamabad.
"With Mr. Musharraf threatening to go back to Pakistan to start a  political career, the Indian government is not very comfortable with  helping him enlarge his political portfolio or image," said Bharat  Karnad, a strategic affairs analyst with the independent Center for  Policy Research in New Delhi.
New Delhi has also been irked by  Mr. Musharraf's recent comments that India is responsible for creating  unrest in Pakistan's south-western Balochistan province, and that India  is trying to create an anti-Pakistan Afghanistan.
Mr. Musharraf  was army chief when India and Pakistan came close to a fourth war in  1999.   Later, when he became Pakistan's military ruler, the South Asian  rivals embarked on a peace process which lowered tensions and led to a  ceasefire along their tense Kashmir border.
That ceasefire is  still holding.  But the peace process remains stalled since the November  2008 terror attacks in Mumbai, which India says were planned by the  Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba.
Karnad says New Delhi is  unlikely to resume a full-fledged peace dialogue with its rival until  its repeated calls to clamp down on groups directing terror at India are  heeded.     
"There has to be something on the ground is what  Delhi wants by way of reassurance before it gets into thinking of  resuming the composite dialogue," added Karnad. "There is no give on  Pakistan's part, so there is unlikely to be any movement in Delhi."
 The top Indian demand is that Islamabad speed up the trial of the  Lashkar-e-Taiba operatives it accuses of planning the Mumbai attacks.
 
