HomeNationalAPPKG delegation discusses Kashmir situation with AJK President

APPKG delegation discusses Kashmir situation with AJK President

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MIRPUR (AJK): Sept. 18 (APP)::The all parties Parliamentary Kashmir group in the British Parliament Tuesday reached Azad Jammu Kashmir on an official visit to assess and discuss, with the AJK leadership, the current
human rights situation in the Indian-held Jammu & Kashmir.
During a meeting with the visiting British delegation in AJK’s capital on Tuesday, the AJK
President Sardar Masood Khan conveyed his deepest gratitude to the All-Party
Parliamentary Kashmir Group (APPKG), in the UK Parliament, which
under the dynamic leadership of Chris Leslie, British Member of
Parliament, has been raising its voice for the protection of human rights of
the people of Jammu and Kashmir and their right to self-determination.
Sardar Masood Khan made these remarks after receiving a
nine-member British Parliamentary delegation comprising Members of Parliament
Chris Leslie, Imran Hussain, Lord Qurban Hussain and Faisal Rasheed, as well as
Member of European Parliament Ms. Anthea McIntyre.
The President apprised the British delegation that life in the
occupied Kashmir had been paralysed due to Indian atrocities
and the popular reaction to human rights violations by the occupation forces in
the territory.
Last week India used deadly force to kill six young men in one of its notorious cordon and search operations in Kulgam.
The entrapped people of Kashmir, the AJK President said, had sought intervention of the international organizations and international community to protect
life, honor and dignity of the Kashmiri people and their leadership. “They need to be protected from the unbridled wrath of Indian forces, paramilitary troops and intelligence
agencies”, said President Khan.
“The paradise on earth is a paradise on fire”, said the President.
The President also drew the attention of the Parliamentarians on
the recently published report of the Office of the High commissioner for Human
Rights which is a strong indictment against India for committing
massive human rights violations. These includes, Lack of access to justice and
impunity, impeding access to justice by military courts and tribunals, illegal
administrative detention, killings, use of pellet-firing shotguns, arbitrary
arrests and detention (including of children), torture, enforced disappearances,
restrictions on the right to freedom of expression and on journalists, using
rape and sexual violence as a weapon of war.
While talking to the British delegation, President Masood Khan
welcomed the statement of the newly appointed Commissioner for Human Rights,
Michelle Bachelet, for emphasising the need for following up on her
predecessor’s report on
the human rights situation in Jammu and Kashmir,
with meaningful improvements, or even open and serious discussions on how the
grave issues raised could be addressed by India.
Addressing the 39th
Session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva, High Commissioner Bachelet said:
“The people of Kashmir have exactly the same rights to justice and dignity as
people all over the world, and we urge the authorities to respect them”, and
underlined that the Office of the High Commissioner continues to request to
visit both sides of the LoC and in the meanwhile will continue its monitoring
and reporting of the situation in IOK.
President Masood Khan
rejected Indian allegations of cross-Line of Control (LoC) infiltration. He
said that India had installed a high-tech surveillance system along the LoC
which had laser activated fences and technology enabled barriers, that had made
any kind of crossings impossible. In any case, the people of Jammu and Kashmir and Pakistan strongly believe in a
diplomatic and political solution to the Kashmir dispute and had urged
India to stop using
state-terrorism to suppress the Kashmiris’ peaceful movement for the realisation
of their right to self-determination.
President Masood Khan
thanked MP Chris Leslie and his team for organizing various testimonies under
the auspices of the APPKG on the human rights violations being perpetrated by
the Indian forces in the occupied territory. The President said that he gave
his testimony to the APPKG on 28 February 2018.
The President
especially appreciated the report’s sharp focus on the draconian laws – Armed
Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) and the Public Safety Act (PSA) – as well as
enforced disappearances in the occupied territory.
These black laws, the
President said, arm occupation forces to kill, use excessive force and detain
persons with impunity and without the fear of prosecution. “These laws must be
repealed”, he said.
MP Chris Leslie during
the interaction thanked the President for inviting him to AJK and informing him
on the recent developments in Indian Occupied Kashmir. He said that this visit
would help the APKKG in better understanding the issue of Kashmir and would contribute
in gathering facts for the report being compiled. He hoped that India would also
reciprocate to their requests for visiting IOK.
As Chairperson of the
Friends of Kashmir in the European Parliament, Ms. Anthea McIntyre said that Kashmir is not a concern for Pakistan and India but the whole world
must be involved in the resolution of this issue. She informed that the EU
Parliament will be organising an international conference on Kashmir where speakers from
all over the world will speak on the situation in IOK. Ms. Anthea is also
steering a human rights report on Kashmir in the EU Parliament, which she
informed will be submitted by next year.
MP Imran Hussain also
invited the President on the day of the report being submitted in the
parliament. Lord Qurban said that human rights violations must be brought to an
end and a certain level of normalcy is essential before efforts are made for
the resolution of the Kashmir issue through a
plebiscite.
The President in his
concluding remarks commended the APPKG for their commitment and determination
in raising the issue of Kashmir. He urged the British
MPs to help raise the issue with the British Prime Minister during the question
answer session in the parliament. He said that as a permanent member of the UN
Security Council, UK must ask for the
circulation of reports compiled by the United Nations Military Observer Group
in India and Pakistan
(UNMOGIP) amongst Security Council members.

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