New Delhi:
The Indian parliament may adopt a resolution against Pakistan whose parliament last night officially condemned the hanging in Delhi last month of Afzal Guru, who belonged to Kashmir.
All political parties are being consulted for a draft of India's resolution.
Earlier today, the BJP argued strongly for the government to end all dialogue with Pakistan in the wake of the Guru resolution and the attack earlier this week on a paramilitary camp in Srinagar, in which five jawans were shot dead in a suicide attack by terrorists. Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde informed parliament yesterday that the terrorists were most likely Pakistani. Islamabad has denounced that theory.
"If India can be kicked around in this manner internationally, there is something seriously wrong with how we are managing our affairs," Mr Jaitley said, referring to the tension with Pakistan and Italy's refusal to send back two marines to face murder charges for shooting two Kerala fishermen.
(Watch: Arun Jaitley slams govt's foreign policy)In its resolution last night, the Pakistani parliament criticized India's decision to hang Guru, 43, for his role in the 2001 attack on the Indian parliament in which 13 people were killed.
(Read) Guru was executed and buried in a top-secret operation at Delhi's Tihar Jail, triggering large protests in his home state of Kashmir.
In January, tension between New Delhi and Islamabad peaked after after two Indian soldiers were found dead, their bodies mutilated. One of them was decapitated. India said Pakistani troops had crossed the Line of Control near Jammu and attacked the soldiers. Pakistan denied the charges.