Advertisement
Advertisement
Kashmir
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A Kashmiri woman shows messages written on her hands at a protest in Srinagar on Friday. Photo: Reuters

Indian ambassador to UN slams interference from ‘international busybodies’ over Kashmir

  • Comments come as UN Security Council holds first formal meeting on disputed region in almost 50 years
  • US President Donald Trump tells Pakistan’s Imran Khan it is important for India and Pakistan to reduce tensions in area through ‘bilateral dialogue’
Kashmir

India’s ambassador to the United Nations on Friday slammed international interference over Kashmir, after the Security Council held its first formal meeting on the disputed region in almost 50 years.

The comments came as US President Donald Trump told Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan in a call on Friday that it was important that India and Pakistan reduce tensions in Kashmir and Jammu through “bilateral dialogue”, according to a White House statement.

The UN discussions, which were requested by Pakistan and China and took place behind closed doors, follow New Delhi’s decision to strip its portion of the Muslim-majority territory of its autonomy earlier this month.

“We do not need international busybodies to try to tell us how to run our lives. We are a billion plus people,” Syed Akbaruddin told reporters at the UN headquarters in New York after the meeting.

It is extremely rare for the Security Council to discuss Kashmir, which has been divided between India and Pakistan since independence from Britain in 1947. It last met to formally discuss the issue in 1971.

On August 5, New Delhi scrapped Article 370 in the Indian constitution that had granted Kashmir special autonomy. It split the state of Jammu and Kashmir in two and downgraded their status to union territories, sparking a row with Pakistan.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government also restricted freedom of movement in the region and cut the internet and phone lines. Akbaruddin said the restrictions were “reasonable” and are being eased.

“Public order is integral to ensuring that democracy prospers,” he added, denying accusations that India was committing human rights violations in the former Himalayan kingdom.

Bollywood teaches more about Kashmir than India’s schools

“India is a vibrant, thriving democracy and we live by it every day. We are committed to addressing the difficulties some of our people have. Please give us the time and space to address these,” he said.

Kashmir has been the spark for two major wars and countless clashes between nuclear-armed arch-rivals India and Pakistan, most recently in February when they conducted tit-for-tat air strikes.

India has regularly blocked discussion of Kashmir at the UN because it considers the matter an internal affair.

Pakistan’s ambassador to the world body hailed Friday’s meeting as evidence the region is an “internationally recognised dispute”.

Indian paramilitary soldiers use catapults to shoot glass marbles at Kashmiri protesters in Srinagar on August 4. Photo: AP

“The voice of people of occupied Kashmir have been heard today by the highest diplomatic forum of the world,” Maleeha Lodhi told reporters.

“This the first and not the last step. It will not end here. It will only end when justice is done to the people of Jammu and Kashmir,” she said, adding that Pakistan wanted “a peaceful settlement”.

China proposed at the meeting that the Security Council issue a statement on the situation in Jammu and Kashmir, but diplomats said the United States, France and Germany objected. Such statements are agreed by consensus.

Pakistan will ‘fight till the end’ if India wages violence in Kashmir: Khan

Summing up the discussions, China’s UN ambassador Zhang Jun said there was serious concern over the situation. No other Security Council members spoke publicly after the meeting.

“They are also concerned about the human rights situation there and also it’s the general view of members that parties concerned should refrain from taking any unilateral action that might further aggravate the tension there since the tension is already very tense and very dangerous,” he said.

India’s Akbaruddin accused Zhang of trying to pass off his remarks as “the will of the international community”.

Additional reporting by Reuters

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: A father’s tragic loss
Post