News
September 14 , 2019
Life remains paralysed in IHK for sixth consecutive week
* Pakistan urges UNSC to demand an end to curfew, rights violations in occupied territory
In Indian-held Kashmir (IHK), normal life remained paralysed for the sixth week due to continued curfew, restrictions and communication blackout imposed by the Indian government.
The Kashmir valley is under continued military siege since 5th August when Narendra Modi-led Indian government repealed the special status of occupied Kashmir and imposed strict clampdown in the territory.
Thousands of Indian troops have kept millions of Kashmiris confined to their homes during all these days.
Educational institutions, shops, markets and business establishments continue to remain closed while public transport is off the roads across the Kashmir valley. Communication services like mobile, internet and TV channels are closed in the entire Kashmir valley and in some parts of Jammu region.
Patients, doctors and other medical staff are facing difficulties in reaching hospitals due to curfew and other restrictions. Food stuff, medicines and other essential commodities have run out of stocks, adding to the miseries of the people.
The occupation authorities continue to place almost all Hurriyat leaders including Syed Ali Gilani, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Muhammad Ashraf Sehrai under house arrest or in jails.
Over 11,000 Kashmiris including resistance leaders, political activists and youth have been arrested. Even pro-India politicians like Farooq Abdullah, Omar Abdullah, Mehbooba Mufti, Shah Faisal and Engineer Abdur Rasheed are also among those arrested.
Bureaucrat-turned-politician, Shah Faesal told the Delhi High Court on Thursday that hundreds of Kashmiris unlawfully detained in occupied Kashmir have no legal assistance.
Meanwhile, Pakistan has called on the UN Security Council to demand an end to India’s repressive military lockdown of occupied Kashmir, now in its second month, and move to implement its resolutions pledging the right of self-determination to the long-suffering Kashmiri people.
“This travesty must end,” Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi said in a firm tone during a UN General Assembly debate on the annual report of the 15-member Council on Thursday.
Recalling that the Security Council had adopted at least 11 resolutions on the Kashmir dispute, the Pakistani envoy told the 193-member Assembly that, when it fails to ensure implementation, the consequences are paid in blood over generations.
“In the case of Kashmir,” she said, “this bloodletting has lasted over seventy years, and has accounted for the lives of over 95,000 Kashmiris, including countless women and children.”
Ambassador Lodhi also pointed out that while the Security Council actively pursues the implementation of some resolutions, it ignores others, thus reflecting double standards in its work.
“In our region,” she said, “the festering Jammu and Kashmir dispute, serves, not only as a reprehensible face to a brutal and suppressive occupation, but also a constant reminder to the solemn commitment that the Security Council, through its several resolutions – at least eleven – made to the Kashmiri people, promising them their right to self-determination.
“Faced with the illegal Indian annexation of occupied Jammu and Kashmir, on 5 August 2019, the grim reality of occupation has become ever starker for the Kashmiri people. The darkness that has been imposed on the occupied territory shows no sign of being lifted.”
In this regard, the Pakistani envoy warned that unilateral action and gross violations of Security Council resolutions threaten the rules-based international order, as well as the Council’s legitimacy and credibility.
On the stalled UN Security Council reform process, Ambassador Lodhi said Pakistan seeks a Council that is democratic, effective, accountable to member states and “in sync” with the contemporary world.
In an obvious reference to the intense campaign for permanent seats on the Council by India, Brazil, Germany and Japan, known as the Group of Four, she said their “divisive tactics” were only prolonging the impasse and vitiating the atmosphere for negotiations.
“The reform process cannot be held hostage to the individual national pursuits of permanent seats,” said the ambassador of Pakistan, which firmly opposes additional permanent members and advocates expansion only in the non-permanent category.
On UN peacekeeping operations, Ambassador Lodhi said Pakistan takes great pride in its role and major contribution to the world body’s flagship activity, including in Sierra Leone, Cote d’Ivoire, Timor-Leste and Liberia.
“Even today, over 5,000 Pakistani soldiers continue to serve as flag-bearers of hope and a prosperous future, for millions afflicted by conflict across the world.
Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk