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UN rights chief 'deeply concerned' about impact of Indian govt's actions on rights of Kashmiris

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The United Nations human rights chief on Monday said she was "deeply concerned about the impact of recent actions" by the Indian government on the human rights of Kashmiris.

In her introductory address for the start of the Human Rights Council's latest session, Michelle Bachelet aired concerns over India's actions against Kashmiris as well as unlawful killings and injuries of Palestinians by Israeli security forces.

Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi left for Switzerland today on a three-day visit to represent Pakistan at the 42nd session of UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

The foreign minister is expected to address the session and present the case of Kashmiris before the delegates attending the forum from across the world, Radio Pakistan reported.

On August 5, the government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stripped Kashmiris of the constitutional rights they had for seven decades through a rushed presidential order. Since then, an indefinite curfew has been in place in occupied Kashmir while elected leaders are still under house arrest.

Bachelet, in her remarks on occupied Kashmir, said her office continues to receive reports on the human rights situation on both sides of the line of control. "I am deeply concerned about the impact of recent actions by the Government of India on the human rights of Kashmiris, including restrictions on internet communications and peaceful assembly, and the detention of local political leaders and activists," she said.

"While I continue to urge the governments of India and Pakistan to ensure that human rights are respected and protected, I have appealed particularly to India to ease the current lockdowns or curfews; to ensure people's access to basic services; and that all due process rights are respected for those who have been detained," she urged.

"It is important that the people of Kashmir are consulted and engaged in any decision-making processes that have an impact on their future."

The foreign minister had last month written to the UN human rights chief to call upon India to end rights abuses in occupied Kashmir.

Qureshi, in a letter addressed to Bachelet, had asked her to demand from India to “rescind its unilateral actions, lift the curfew and other draconian measures, and restore fundamental rights of the Kashmiri people”.

Environmental concerns
The rights chief, who is a former president of Chile, put her main focus on environmental concerns, calling variously for greater participation in the fight against climate change by businesses and greater space for environmental activists to express their views.

“We are burning up our future literally,” Bachelet said. “The world has never seen a threat to human rights of this scope. This is not a situation where any country, any institution, any policymaker can stand on the sidelines.”

Looking past personal criticism against her from Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro in recent days, Bachelet also reiterated her concerns about the “drastic acceleration of deforestation of the Amazon”.

“The fires currently raging across the rainforest may have catastrophic impact on humanity as a whole,” Bachelet said, “but their worst effects are suffered by the women, men and children who live in these areas, among them, many indigenous peoples.” She urged authorities in Brazil, as well as Paraguay and Bolivia, to ensure “longstanding environmental policies” are carried out, “thus preventing future tragedies”.

Last week, Bolsonaro praised the 1973 military coup by General Augusto Pinochet in Chile that led to Bachelet's father's death a year later in captivity. Asked by The Associated Press to respond to those comments, she declined to comment.

Migrant rights
As for migrants' rights in Central America and on the US-border, Bachelet said she was concerned that policies by the United States, Mexico and others in the region “are putting migrants at heightened risk of human rights violations and abuses”.

“Notably, I am alarmed that migrant children continue to be detained in centers in both the US and Mexico, contravening the best interests of the child, which is a fundamental tenet of international law,” she said, adding at least 35,000 asylum-seekers have been “pushed back” to Mexican border areas to wait for their hearings this year.

The Trump administration pulled the United States out of the council last year, accusing it of an anti-Israel bias and denouncing some member states that Washington says are repeat rights violators.

Alarmed by unlawful killings of Palestinians
As for Israel, whose government has repeatedly accused the council of anti-Israeli bias, Bachelet decried “very high levels of settler violence, and Israel's failure to adequately protect Palestinians from such attacks or hold the perpetrators to account”.

She cited a recent increase in demolitions of homes under an Israeli zoning and planning framework “which discriminates heavily against Palestinians”.

“I continued to be alarmed by reports of unlawful killings and injuries of Palestinians by Israeli security forces across the entire occupied territory, accompanied by a lack of full accountability for instances of possible excessive use of force,” she said.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1504391/u...f-indian-govts-actions-on-rights-of-kashmiris
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I especially welcome the statement by the UNHCHR in Geneva today. I call upon the UN Human Rights Council to immediately set up the indep Investigation commission to probe human rights abuses in IOJK as recommended by the UNHCHR's two reports on Kashmir. The time to act is now. <a href="https://t.co/Xy8hfkDwe2">pic.twitter.com/Xy8hfkDwe2</a></p>— Imran Khan (@ImranKhanPTI) <a href="https://twitter.com/ImranKhanPTI/status/1171047458400604161?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 9, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
This thread will soon disappear into the abyss which is not surprising.

IK is spot on in calling it out as it is and brainwashing goes hand in hand with the extreme idiology.
No Indian is willing to call it out for what it is, instead they continue to defend their government’s actions.
 
This thread will soon disappear into the abyss which is not surprising.

IK is spot on in calling it out as it is and brainwashing goes hand in hand with the extreme idiology.
No Indian is willing to call it out for what it is, instead they continue to defend their government’s actions.

i think you mean a indian hindu, its sad but true. No one will want to live like the kashmiris are.
 
i think you mean a indian hindu, its sad but true. No one will want to live like the kashmiris are.

Indian Hindu? Indians are quiet united when they have to give a reply to Pakistan.

Indians of every religion have stood to fight againist any enemy, including pakistan. You need to read history and come out of your delusions.
 
World must not remain indifferent to tragedy unfolding in Kashmir, Qureshi tells UN Rights Council

Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Tuesday said that the international community "must not remain indifferent to the tragedy that is unfolding before our eyes" in occupied Kashmir.

Addressing the 42nd session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Qureshi while referring to India's recent actions in Kashmir said: "Today, I have knocked on the doors of the Human Rights Council, the repository of the world’s conscience on human rights, to seek justice and respect for the people of Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir.

"We must not allow this august body to be embarrassed on the world stage. As a founding member of this council, Pakistan feels morally and ethically bound to prevent this from occurring," he stressed, adding that in order to do so the body should not remain indifferent to the tragedy that was unfolding in Kashmir.

"We must not let political, commercial, and parochial considerations cloud and impair our thoughts and action.

"We must act decisively and with conviction."

Qureshi urged the UNHRC to "pay heed to the plight of the Kashmiri people" and to address the warning signs of a "looming human catastrophe".

He asked the human rights council to take the following steps:

Urge India to immediately stop the use of pellet guns, end the bloodshed, lift the curfew, reverse the clampdown and communications blackout, restore fundamental freedoms and liberties, release political prisoners, stop targeting human rights defenders, and fulfill obligations under the United Nations Security Council resolutions and various human rights instruments, as required by international law
Take steps to bring to justice the perpetrators of human rights violations of Kashmiris and in this context, constitute a Commission of Inquiry (COI), as recommended by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Authorise the Office of the High Commissioner and the Human Rights Council’s special procedures mandate holders to monitor and report on India’s human rights violations in occupied Kashmir and regularly update the council
Call upon India to allow unhindered access to human rights organisations and international media to occupied Kashmir
India had imposed a military clampdown on Jammu and Kashmir in the first week of August to prevent protests against the New Delhi move to revoke the special status of the disputed territory, with mobile phone networks and the internet still cut off in all but a few pockets. Occupied Kashmir has seen a decades-old movement against the Indian occupation with tens of thousands, mostly civilians, killed.

Kashmiris rights being 'trampled with impunity' by India
At the start of his address today, the foreign minister said that "basic and inalienable human rights" of the people of occupied Kashmir were being "trampled with impunity by India".

"The people of this occupied land are suffering systematic, and serial, violations of their fundamental freedoms," he said, adding that the people of the disputed region had been "virtually caged by an illegal military occupation" for the past six weeks.

"To what end, I ask, Mr President?" Qureshi said addressing the president of the council.

"The answer is obvious. And it lays bare the real character of a country that pretends to be a bastion of democracy, federalism and secularism."

Qureshi provided a review of the situation in occupied Kashmir which he said had been transformed by India into the "largest prison in the planet" where basic amenities and means of communication were not accessible.

He said shops and hospitals in the region were running out of supplies and the political leadership of Kashmir had been placed under house arrest or imprisoned. Additionally, Qureshi said that over 6,000 individuals had been arrested without due process of law.

The foreign minister said that international media outlets and neutral observers were also reporting on the atrocities being carried out against the people of occupied Kashmir.

"No, ladies and gentleman, this is not a flashback to medieval times. This barbarism is happening today — in the 21st century."

He said that with its actions, India was breaching multiple international human rights instruments that it was a party to.

"This is the real story of Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir and its people under subjugation that India is desperate to hide from the world. This is the true face of the so-called largest democracy of the world. This is the conduct of a country, which aspires to be a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council."

"At the root of this mayhem is India’s refusal to grant the people of Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir their right of self-determination.

"This seven-decade-old travesty of justice, has been compounded by the present Indian government’s nefarious and twisted dream — outlined explicitly in the ruling party’s manifesto — to turn, by force of arms, Jammu and Kashmir’s Muslim majority community into a minority."

He reiterated that India's unilateral decision to revoke Article 370 on August 5 was illegal under international law.

"With these illegal changes, India’s presence is, by its own yardstick, naked foreign occupation."

"India’s assertion that these actions are its internal affair is patently false," Qureshi said, adding that Kashmir had been on the agenda of the UN for over 70 years and the meeting of the UN Security Council on August 16 attested to this fact.

"What is happening in Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir is not a country specific situation in this council’s parlance."

'Shudder to mention genocide but I must'
"The people of Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir are apprehending the worst," the foreign minister said, adding that Kashmiris — as a national, ethnic, racial and religious group of people — face "grave threats to their lives, way of living and livelihoods from a murderous, misogynistic and xenophobic regime".

"I shudder to mention the word genocide here, but I must.

"Some have said that Kashmir echoes with the silence of the graveyard. Others contend that it is a lull before a storm."

The foreign minister said that India's efforts to "falsely" label Kashmir's struggle for self determination as "terrorism and cross border terrorism" are "shameless and indefensible".

He said that Pakistan had suggested numerous bilateral and multilateral mechanism, including doubling the strength of the UN Observers Mission to monitor the Line of Control (LoC), that would "disprove India's self-serving claims".

However, Qureshi said that India rejected all these proposals.

"I have every fear that India will once again resort to false-flag operations, and use the bogey of terrorism as a red herring, to divert international opinion, even attack Pakistan."

Additionally, the foreign minister said that India's increased ceasefire violations along the LoC and the use of cluster ammunition and heavy artillery should end immediately.

"I have regularly sensitised the UN Security Council, about the grave dangers to peace and security in nuclearised South Asia and beyond, as a result of India’s reckless posture and draconian measures.

"While the Security Council is seized of peace and security dimensions of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute, the Human Rights Council must pay far greater and immediate attention to the human rights of the people of Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir."

He reiterated Pakistan’s endorsement of the recommendations of two Kashmir reports issued by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

In several reports, the UN rights chiefs have requested the establishment of a COI, which is one of the UN's highest-level probes, generally reserved for major crises like the Syrian conflict.

Pakistan is expected to present a resolution to the council for consideration by the end of the 42nd session on September 27.

"We urge focused discussions on the two reports in the Human Rights Council and a unanimous decision by this house to implement their recommendations made to India, Pakistan and foremost to the Human Rights Council."

"If India has nothing to hide, it should allow unhindered access to the COI, as recommended by the UN High Commissioner. Pakistan stands ready to allow access to the proposed COI or other mechanisms on our side of the Line of Control, together with similar access to Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir."

"For seven decades, the people of Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir have awaited implementation of the UN Security Council resolutions, prescribing a plebiscite to honour their right of self-determination.

"History would be a most unforgiving judge if we fail, yet again, the people of this illegally occupied territory, in their moment of greatest peril," he said concluding his address.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1504564/w...ng-in-kashmir-qureshi-tells-un-rights-council
 
"We must not allow this august body to be embarrassed on the world stage. As a founding member of this council, Pakistan feels morally and ethically bound to prevent this from occurring," he stressed, adding that in order to do so the body should not remain indifferent to the tragedy that was unfolding in Kashmir.

"We must not let political, commercial, and parochial considerations cloud and impair our thoughts and action.

"We must act decisively and with conviction."

LOL yet when the UN speaks out or tries to act against, for example, Saudi actions in Yemen or China's actions in Xinjiang Pakistan looks the other way or worse still backs the side carrying out the violence.

Where are Pakistan's morals and ethics then?
 
Being concerned is not enough. Something practical has to be done to stop the slaughter. IK would have thrashed Nawaz or Zardari had this been happening under the rule. Now he is looking like a complete idiot himself doing nothing whilst IoK continues to bleed. This is why our own Kashmiris understandably seem to be furious with him as well.
 
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