Sartaj highlights special significance of Kashmir Solidarity Day

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ISLAMABAD: Advisor to the Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs Sartaj Aziz Saturday said the Kashmir Solidarity Day, observed every year on February 5, had special significance this year because the recent uprising in Indian occupied Kashmir, following the July extra-judicial killing of popular youth leader, Burhan Muzaffar Wani, had shaken the conscious of the international community.

Kashmiris were subjected to a holocaust in November 1947, here called, when Indian forces killed more than 500,000 defence less Kashmiri men, women and children. But Kashmiris continued their struggle for their right of self-determination promised to them in five different UN Security Council resolutions between 1948 and 1954, he added.

Since 1990, when the movement again gathered pace, over 100,000 Kashmiris had been martyred, and tens of thousands arrested or maimed, the Advisor said in a statement.

Throughout this period, he said, Indian authorities armed with inhuman laws, such as Public Safety Act and AFSPA, had tried to muzzle the Kashmiri voice for freedom and refused to allow the UN Human Rights Commission, other human rights groups or the international media free access to the occupied Kashmir to verify the massive human rights violation or to report on them.

“But the day of July 8, 2016, marks a turning point in this historic struggle of the Kashmiri people”, Sartaj Aziz said. The brute force unleashed in the next few days led to the merciless killing of 150 youth, 20,000 were seriously injured and many hundreds were blinded either completely or partially.

He said the brutality, which had continued unabated in the past seven months, had not, however, dampened the resolve of Kashmiri youth to secure their right of self-determination.

Even prominent Indian leaders and a section of the Indian media were now raising their voice against this brutality. “They have testified that Kashmiri youth are in open revolt against the Indian government and are no longer afraid of losing their lives in this struggle for their fundamental rights,” he added.

July turning point, he said, was the total rejection of Indian narrative by the international community that Kashmir was an integral part of India and that people of Kashmir were satisfied with the present arrangement but some disturbances took place because of cross border terrorism.

“The whole world now acknowledges that this is an indigenous youth led movement which has become stronger because of the Indian government’s misguided efforts to change the demographic composition of the state and its insensitivity to the rights of minority communities in India.

“There have been debates in the parliaments of many countries and civil society and human rights organizations in Europe and North America and specially in the United Kingdom and Nordic countries, have been mobilizing public support for their campaigns to force India to halt the bloodshed in Kashmir and resume the dialogue process with Pakistan and the Kashmiri leadership to find an acceptable solution to the longstanding dispute, still on the UN agenda.”

Sartaj Azia said India had been desperately trying to divert the attention of the global community from this blood stained reality of Kashmir, by intensifying cross border firing along the Line of Control and pretending to be a major “victim” of cross border terrorism from Pakistan.

In that game of brinkmanship, he pointed out, the Indian narrative had been totally rejected. “It is now widely acknowledged that Pakistan itself is a much bigger victim of terrorism including that sponsored by India and that in the past three years, Pakistan has achieved commendable success in tackling the menace of terrorism and extremism.”

He expressed his deep concern over the Indian government’s drive to change the demography in occupied Jammu & Kashmir, which was a blatant violation of UN resolutions on Kashmir.

The UN Secretary General, Sartaj Aziz said in conclusion, had declared 2017 as the year of peace. One major hotspot of violence was the Line of Control between Indian occupied Kashmir and Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

There was an urgent need for the international community to take effective steps to stop the Kashmiri bloodshed by India and resolve the Kashmir dispute by organizing a referendum in accordance with UN resolutions, to make a final determination if the Kashmiri people really want to live perpetually under Indian Occupation.