Special Assistant to Prime Minister on Information and Broadcasting Dr Firdous Ashiq Awan on Friday said Pakistan would be compelled to do everything for the oppressed Kashmiris if the
international bodies failed to force India to follow the United N
ations charter.
In a video message, she said as the United N
ations and Organization of Islamic Cooperation were the highest forums, so Pakistan had taken its case to the UN.
Firdous said the United N
ations already had 11 resolutions on Kashmir which was a grave human issue. If the
international bodies failed today then Pakistan would be compelled to do everything for the oppressed Kashmiris, which should be done for the sake of humanity, she added.
She said India had always violated the
international agreements including the resolutions of UN Securit
y Council on Kashmir. India also violated the
international law when it carried out nuclear explosions in 1974 and 1998, and again when it violated the 1972 Shimla agreement, she added.
The special assistant said the world could not stop India from nuclear explosions in 1974 and it also violated the 1948 UN resolutions on Kashmir, sending a message to the world that it d
id not accept decisions of the
international institutions.
She stressed that India was committing grave human rights viol
ations and oppressing the people in Kashmir.
“If the world d
id not stop the massacre in Kashmir then the world would again see a repeat of what happened in Rohingya and Bosnia. The issue of Kashmir has become a matter of concern for the
international community,” she added.
She recalled that India, which called itself secular, on January 1, 1948 went to the UN Securit
y Council on the issue of Kashmir.
When India saw that the decision of the Securit
y Council was against the illegal occupation of Kashmir and the council was giving the right of self-d
etermination to Kashmiris, it backtracked, she reminded.
The resolution 47 of the Securit
y Council gave Kashmiris the right to self-d
etermination, Dr Firdous said adding it was test of the five permanent members and ten non-permanent members of United N
ations Securit
y Council, whether they could compel India to follow the UN charter.
If this d
id not happen then it would put a question mark on the reputation of these institutions, she remarked.
She said that even after 12 days, worst kind of curfew was imposed in Indian Occupied Kashmir. All across Kashmir there was lockdown and communic
ations were suspended and Kashmiris were facing a severe shortage of food and medicines.
The
international media, and even from within India voices were being raised about the present situation in Kashmir, she added.
Dr Firdous said India d
id not succeed in suppressing voice of Kashmiris in the last 70 years and would be unable to do so in future as well.
Meanwhile, Firdous strongly condemned the unprovoked Indian firing on the line of control.
In a tweet on Friday, she said those rendering their lives for the defence of the country “are our pride and the entire nation pays tributes to them”.
She said the Indian belligerence poses threat to the regional peace. She pointed out that India is subjecting Kashmiri population to its tyranny and persecution on both sides of the LoC.