My proclivity for building an amiable framework of Indo-Pak relations is known in both countries. It is in this spirit that the India-Pakistan Friendship Society (IPFS) works, according a place of honour to Pakistani officials in its functions. When Najam Sethi told us about various difficulties that confronted civil society in Pakistan, I viewed them in our own context, where our baggage is no lighter. For some years now as president of the IPFS, I have been trying to arrange meetings between parliamentarians of the two countries. In 1986, I wrote to Benazir Bhutto and later asked her personally to send across leading members of Parliament to India, or to invite ours. But to no avail. Five years were to pass before a courageous Pakistani journalist—Imtiaz Alam—arranged a meeting in Islamabad. Even the hardline members of the Indian delegation were singing a different tune on their return. A month back, Imtiaz was here to organise another meeting of Indo-Pak parliamentarians in Delhi. The response was positive and the meet would have been a thunderous success, but our own political crisis intervened. I was sad to learn that soon after his return to Pakistan, officially-sponsored goons descended on him. He must be thanking his stars that only his car was set on fire; he was not meted out the treatment that fellow scribes like Ejaz Haider or M.A.K. Lodhi received.