Kashmir Black Day: Asif reminds int’l community, UN of their promises

Government of PakistanKashmir Black Day: Asif reminds int’l community, UN of their promises

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: The Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif on Friday urged the international community as well as the United Nations to shake off the stupor and to deliver on its promises to the Kashmiri people through the implementation of the numerous resolutions acknowledging their right of self-determination.

“We express solidarity with our Kashmiri brethren. They continue to suffer today at the hands of a brutal occupation,” the foreign minister said in his message on the occasion of the ‘Kashmir Black Day’ being observed today (October 27).

The minister said that we will continue to extend to them our unflinching moral, political and diplomatic support in their just struggle for the right of self-determination.

“Our support will continue till the realization of the cherished dream for freedom of millions of Kashmiris from draconian Indian occupation,” he said.

Asif said that on the fateful day of October 27, hostile Indian forces entered the peaceful land of Jammu and Kashmir and occupied it against the wishes of its people.

The minister said that India flouted all conventions of international law and civility in doing so. It only compounded its crimes by its continuous disregard for the basic human rights of the Kashmiri people and refusal to implement United Nations Security Council resolutions which acknowledged the Kashmiri’s right of self-determination, he said.

The foreign minister said that over the last 69 years, Kashmiris in Indian Occupied Kashmir have been killed and maimed, their women molested and dishonored, their children orphaned and left without family, all because India has tried in vain to force the local population to accept a false rule that the Kashmiris simply refuse to accept, a rule that is submerged in cruelty, inhumanity and suppression.

Khawaja Asif said that the indifference of the international community to the plight of the Kashmiri people does little to augment the confidence of the people of Pakistan in the basic humanity of mankind as well as the impartiality of institutions like the United Nations.

“The day we accept that there is no such thing as international law, moral outrage or sanction for crimes against humanity would be a sad day indeed,” Asif said.

“The day we accept the precedent that a nation can openly oppress a people without universal condemnation for doing so, we set a dangerous precedent that is not in the interest of any of us.”

Mati
Mati
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