Islamabad seeks peaceful resolution of Kashmir dispute

DM Monitoring

UNITED NATIONS: Describing India’s occupation of Jammu and Kashmir as the “worst manifestation of modern-day colonialism”, Pakistan has called on the UN to push for a peaceful settlement of the lingering dispute in accordance with the Security Council resolutions and Kashmiri people’s wishes.
Noting that since 1946, 80 former colonies have gained independence, Ambassador Munir Akram told the General Assembly’s Special Political and Decolonization (Fourth) Committee that there were still peoples who were denied the right to self-determination, “most prominently the people of occupied Jammu and Kashmir as well as Palestine”.
The right of self-determination of the Kashmiri people, the Pakistani envoy said, was explicitly recognised in the UNSC resolution 47 and several subsequent resolutions, which prescribed that the final disposition of the State of Jammu and Kashmir should be decided by its people through a free and fair plebiscite held under the UN auspices.
These resolutions were accepted by both India and Pakistan, he said, adding that under Article 25 of the UN Charter, both parties were obliged to implement these resolutions.
In his remarks, Ambassador Akram said that durable peace in the Middle East could only be achieved through the two-state solution and the establishment of a viable, independent, and contiguous state of Palestine, with the pre-1967 borders and Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital.
On Kashmir, the Pakistani envoy said that for 75 years, through force and fraud, India avoided the implementation of UN resolutions, and since 1989, its “brutal” campaign of repression killed 100,000 Kashmiris. Since Aug 5, 2019, he said, India took “unilateral and illegal steps” to annex occupied Kashmir in what its leaders termed as a “Final Solution”.
“Resolution 122 (1957) of the Security Council provides that unilateral measures ‘to determine the future shape and affiliation of the entire state or any part thereof, would not constitute a disposition of the state’,” Ambassador Akram said, adding that consequently all unilateral actions taken by India on and after Aug 5, 2019 were not only illegal, but, “ipso facto, null and void”.
“Kashmir today is the most densely occupied place in the world, with more than 900,000 Indian occupation troops deployed there who have perpetrated a vicious campaign of extrajudicial killings in fake encounters and so-called ‘cordon and search’ operations; abduction and enforced disappearances of 13,000 young Kashmiri boys; collective punishments, destroying and burning entire villages and urban neighbourhoods,” he said.