Shaharyar, 80, who has been Pakistan's foreign secretary and also High Commissioner to New Delhi, said the Indian people and media still had a lot of grudge against Pakistan over the Mumbai terror attacks.
"Bilateral cricket ties with India are governed by existing diplomatic relations between the two countries but what feelings the Indian people and media have towards us also plays an important role," Shaharyar told a news conference today.
He was asked whether he thought that the Lahore Lions team would be able to take part in the Champions League in India and if this didn't happen would it affect the agreement between the two cricket boards to play six bilateral series between 2015 and 2023 under the International Cricket Council (ICC) future tours program.
Around 164 people and over 300 persons were injured in the terrorist attack carried out by the Lashkar-e-Taiba in Mumbai.
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India has blamed Pakistan for the attacks and has said it has done nothing to punish those responsible for planning the attack.
Since the Mumbai attacks there has been no full bilateral series between the two countries even after Ajmal Kasab, the lone attacker who was captured alive by the Indian authorities, was hanged in November 2012.
Shaharyar said he would be going to India soon to meet with Indian cricket officials and was also slated to meet them during the ICC meeting in October. "When I meet them I have a lot to discuss with them regarding restoration of bilateral ties and participation of our players in the IPL," he said.
Since the Mumbai attacks in November 2008, the Indian board had also not invited Pakistani players for the Indian Premier League.