however, added that India should be as welcoming to Pakistanis as Pakistan was to Indians and gave his own example that India was constantly denying a visa to him and not allowing him to visit the Kashmir valley. He said Britain was the greatest country, which had provided excellent opportunities for immigrants from South Asia to prosper and make a name for themselves. Both Sir Ghulam Noon and Lord Ahmed praised Rami Ranger for being consistent with his efforts to bring the Pakistani and Indian communities together.
Sir Ghulam Noon, the Indian origin business magnate, told the audience about his visits to Pakistan and recommended every Indian to go to Pakistan and enjoy the best hospitality “one can’t enjoy anywhere else”.
He lamented that more than six decades had passed by since partition and still India and Pakistan were bent on outdoing each other through arms race and totally neglecting the education and health of their poor people while they should be concentrating on their shared ethos and what mutual strengths they had. He gave the example of European Union nations and believed that a united consortium in the subcontinent could do wonders for the uplift of the economy. Sir Noon stressed that a few misguided extremists could not be allowed to play havoc with the communal harmony and exploit the religion to stoke fears and divisions.
Dr Rami Ranger, MBE, warned in his speech that the Indo-Pak rivalry if exported to Britain could damage British society as a whole and expressed worry that in many countries the rivalry from back home was now beginning to damage society in many countries where South Asians settled in large numbers.
On the other hand, he added, the friendship of Indians and Pakistanis had far-reaching benefits for mankind throughout the world.
“Our founders created two separate countries to benefit their people and not for us to become rivals and to impede each other’s progress along with that of society. It is time we drew a line under our rivalry and moved together as one to benefit one another.” “Our love-hate relationship must now change to just love, having seen the consequences of our hatred for over six decades,” he stressed.
He highlighted that the Pakistani squad in the recently concluded Commonwealth Games received the warmest and friendliest reception, which showed how at people-to-people level there was so much love for each other. Dr Ashraf Chohan recounted how the commonality between the people from India and Pakistan, which consists of language, food, culture and interests in music, is the key to the formation of the friendship forum.
He said the two countries needed to go beyond rhetoric and take practical steps to normalise relations. He said the leaders of the two countries needed to show courage like Nawaz Sharif, who in his capacity as the prime minister of Pakistan greeted Atal Bihari Vajpayee on the border.
“There has been greater diplomacy and there has been cultural exchange. However, the issue belongs there and the disputes remain live between the two countries, which now and again becomes so hard that a nuclear conflict becomes a possibility,” Chohan said, urging both countries to address the core issues.
Tony Baldry, MP, said the forum had done a laudable job in bridging differences and bringing together the host community as well as the migrant Pakistani and Indian communities. He said life was too short to devote to negativities and differences and the best way forward was through friendship and peaceful coexistence.