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India News Updated Jul 2, 2026

117 Citizens from India, Pakistan Urge PMs to Restore Dialogue for Peace

A coalition of 117 prominent citizens from India and Pakistan has issued an open letter to their Prime Ministers, urging immediate restoration of dialogue and normalcy. The signatories, including 61 Indians and 56 Pakistanis, call for reopening trade and communication channels to resolve historical grievances. Core signatory Om Prakash Shah emphasizes that war benefits no one and that high-level engagement is essential to de-escalate tensions. Drawing from Indian epics, he highlights the shared responsibility of both nuclear-armed nations to prioritize peace for mutual economic and human benefit.

"War benefits no one": 117 prominent citizens from India and Pakistan urge PMs to resume dialogue

New Delhi, July 2

In a major civil society push to bridge the deep diplomatic chasm between New Delhi and Islamabad, a coalition of 117 prominent citizens from both sides of the border have jointly issued an open letter to the Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan, urging them to immediately restore peace, normalcy, and bilateral communication.

The group, which consists of 61 Indians and 56 Pakistanis, includes social activists, intellectuals, and public figures who believe that the current prolonged freeze in diplomatic ties is unsustainable.

Speaking on the initiative, a social activist and one of the core signatories of the letter, Om Prakash Shah, highlighted that the primary objective of the campaign is to break the ongoing political deadlock by addressing the psychological barriers between the two nations.

"I, with a group of 117 people, comprising 61 Indians and 56 Pakistanis, have jointly written a letter. It is an open letter addressed to the Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan. The core request is for them to engage in dialogue, normalise relations, and resume trade and communication... Currently, there is a trust deficit between us," he said.

Om Prakash Shah emphasised that high-level engagement is the only viable mechanism to de-escalate tensions and iron out historical grievances.

"That is why the Prime Minister of Pakistan and the Prime Minister of India must talk to each other and hold discussions regarding the state of our relationship," the signatory stated. "Whatever differences exist should be resolved through dialogue. That is the purpose."

The petition outlines a clear roadmap for de-escalating the cross-border chill, focusing heavily on mutual economic and human benefits: Reopening commercial channels to benefit local economies on both sides; Re-establishing robust lines of communication and diplomatic interaction to prevent miscalculations and a collective realisation that military escalation yields no winners.

"The time has come to realise that war is not the solution; war benefits no one," the activist concluded, echoing a sentiment that civil society hopes will resonate within the highest corridors of power in both New Delhi and Islamabad.

Drawing parallels from the Indian epics, Shah said, "Lord Rama sent Angada when the armies were standing, saying, 'Go and talk; if they release Sita with respect, we will all go back.' Lord Krishna did the same; he went as a peace messenger and said, 'Give five villages.' He knew what the consequences would be if war broke out. Rama said, when the war ended and they won, 'What happiness will this victory bring? So many people were lost, and civilisations were destroyed.' Civilisations perish when war takes place."

Referring to the shared responsibility of both countries as nuclear-armed neighbours, he added, "So, because of all this fear, what often happens between us should not happen. There is always a fear that we are both nuclear nations, so our relations must be good, which is also in our interest. It will improve our trade and benefit both sides. This letter was written in that context. It is a request."

— ANI

Reader Comments

Vikram M

Though I appreciate the sentiment, we need to be realistic. Trust has been broken multiple times—most recently with the 2019 Pulwama attack and the abrogation of Article 370. How many times will we extend an olive branch only to get stabbed in the back? Dialogue is fine, but only if Pakistan takes concrete steps to dismantle cross-border terrorism first. Actions, not letters.

Aditya G

The references to Lord Rama and Lord Krishna in the letter are powerful. Our ancient traditions always emphasized diplomacy over war. As the Mahabharata says, "Dharma" includes exhausting all peaceful options before even thinking of conflict. I'm proud that these 117 citizens are reminding our leaders of that wisdom. Let's hope for a thaw in relations 🤞🇮🇳🤝🇵🇰

Sarah B

Having traveled between both countries before tensions spiked, I can say that ordinary Indians and Pakistanis have so much more in common than differences. Our food, music, family values, and even our problems are shared. It's tragic that politicians use the border as a political tool while citizens yearn for peace. Let's hope this letter isn't just ignored.

Neha E

Everyone wants peace, but we must remember that the onus is on Pakistan to stop using terrorism as state policy. Kargil, Mumbai 26/11, Pathankot—these aren't ancient history. I'm all for dialogue, but not for "business as usual" dialogue while our soldiers are being targeted. Let's have pre-conditions: end support for LeT, JeM, and Hafiz Saeed. Then we talk.

P Priya S < We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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