Pakistan hits back at Indian claims at UNGA, reiterates Kashmir not 'internal matter'
Pakistan hit back at India after the latter described occupied Kashmir as an "internal matter" and levelled allegations of sponsoring terrorism against the former.
After Prime Minister Imran Khan wrapped up his fiery address to the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Friday, in which he criticised the world for its silence on Indian actions in occupied Kashmir, the Indian delegation exercised its right to reply.
In her speech, India’s First Secretary Sneha Dubey said Pakistan played the “victim of terrorism” but instead fostered terrorists in its backyard, Scroll.in reported.
She also claimed that occupied Kashmir and Ladakh “were, are and will always be an integral and inalienable part of India”. She emphasised that this included areas that are "occupied" by Pakistan, according to the report.
In response, Pakistani representative Saima Saleem said that occupied Kashmir was not a "so-called integral part of India nor is it India's internal matter".
"India remains in occupation of an internationally recognised disputed territory whose final disposition needs to be decided in accordance with the democratic principle of a free and impartial plebiscite under UN auspices, as provided for under numerous resolutions of the Security Council," she said.
She said that India was levelling baseless allegations and relying on "outright lies and obfuscation" to divert attention from human rights violations in occupied Kashmir.
"India’s compulsive obsession with Pakistan is neither new nor surprising. It has permeated its ruling elite and governance structures.
"But there is a method to this obsession as it underpins India’s electoral and foreign policy under the ruling RSS-BJP 'Hindutva' inspired government."
She said that the EU Disinfo lab had explained how India has used such tools of deflection, deception and disinformation against Pakistan, including at the United Nations.
Read: Indian network lobbying against Pakistan exposed
She said that Indian human rights violations in occupied Kashmir were also documented in two reports by the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights.
"Since August 5, 2019, the High Commissioner has urged India to 'unlock the situation and fully restore the rights that are currently being denied' to the people of IIOJK [Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir].
"Several other special rapporteurs and mandate holders have also termed the human rights situation in IIOJK in a 'free fall'. Major human rights organisations, including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, have expressed similar serious concerns about India’s human rights violations, including in occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
"Not surprisingly, Indian authorities have failed to respond to any of these communications."
The Pakistani representative said a witch hunt had been launched against those who "dared to report the crimes".
"Only last year, Amnesty International ceased work in India citing constant harassment at the hands of the government," she pointed out.
She added that the Pakistani government had recently released a comprehensive dossier on the systemic and widespread human rights violations being perpetrated by Indian security forces in the occupied valley.
Read: Pakistan unveils dossier on war crimes, rights violations in Indian-occupied Kashmir
"We call upon the international community to take cognisance of the compelling evidence and hold India accountable for the heinous crimes.
"If India has nothing to hide, it must accept a UN commission of inquiry and agree to implement the Security Council resolutions stipulating a plebiscite to enable the people of Jammu and Kashmir to exercise their right to self-determination," she said.
'India principal perpetrator of terrorism in region'
Commenting on the Indian allegations of Pakistan sponsoring terrorism, she said: "As for India’s use of the canard of terrorism, regurgitating stale arguments that are typical of all occupiers.
"Let me emphasise that India itself is the principal perpetrator, sponsor, financier and abettor of terrorism in the region."
She said that India was currently involved in at least four different types of terrorism. First being state terrorism to suppress the people of occupied Kashmir.
Second, funding and supporting terrorist groups, such as the proscribed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which is involved in cross border terrorist attacks against Pakistani military and civilian targets.
Third, India is financing and organising mercenary terrorist organisations against Pakistan to impede economic growth and prosperity of the region, the Pakistani representative said, adding that Indian National Security Adviser Ajit Doval had also publicly admitted to this.
Fourth, India is being guided by a supremacist ideology that has mainstreamed Islamophobia and bigotry against minorities, particularly Muslims, in its political discourse, she said.
"In today’s incredibly intolerant India, the 200 million-strong Muslim minority faces frequent lynching by ‘cow vigilantes’, pogroms by RSS thugs with official complicity, discriminatory citizenship laws to disenfranchise Muslims, and a concerted campaign to destroy mosques and the rich Muslim heritage of India."
The Pakistani representative concluded her speech by stating that the Indian delegation would do well to reflect on the troubling trajectory of their state, rather than "indulging in patent falsehoods about Pakistan".
"India must realise that it has continuously and miserably failed to suppress the Kashmiris living under its occupation from demanding their inalienable right to self-determination," she said.
Saleem's response also garnered attention from federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Fawad Chaudhry.
In a tweet, he said: "Saima Saleem exercising right of reply in UNGA. Saima is visually impaired, but [the] way [in which] she spoke [it] seems her heart can see everything. You have made us proud. Thank you."