India gears to face Pakistan at UN over Kashmir

India gears to face Pakistan at UN over Kashmir

Indian, Pakistani leaders will face each other at UN session next week after heightened tensions over Kashmir

By Riyaz ul Khaliq

ANKARA (AA) - India is expecting the same narrative on Jammu and Kashmir from Pakistan at the upcoming UN General Assembly session, its envoy said Friday.

On a question posed to him over Kashmir, Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin, India's Permanent Representative to the UN, said: "What you're telling me is that it will be more of the same, much more of the same from the side of one country. If that is so, what is our response?”

“So, let me put it this way. That it is for every country to determine its trajectory of how it wants to approach global platforms. There may be some who stoop low. Our response to them is we soar high. They may stoop low, we soar high," the envoy said, according to PTI news agency.

The prime ministers of India and Pakistan will be face to face for the first time at the UN gathering on Sept. 27 since New Delhi imposed a near-total lockdown on Jammu and Kashmir and scrapped special provisions guaranteed to the region under Indian constitution on Aug. 5.

Also, the Indian government further downgraded and divided the disputed region into two centrally controlled “union territories”.

Pakistan slammed the move asking the UN Security Council to intervene which held its first meeting on the Kashmir dispute in mid-August.

Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan has vowed to raise what he terms India's violation of UN resolutions on Kashmir in the upcoming session.

His Indian counterpart Narendra Modi is scheduled to speak ahead of Khan.

"We explained to you what is our approach and what is our orientation and how we are working very differently from our previous experiences. But there may be somebody who is wanting to bring an issue which they have raised before...Your question further is that what if they become more-shrill, what if they raise it in a much more-sharper manner," Akbaruddin said in a veiled reference to Pakistan.

From 1954 until Aug. 5, 2019, Jammu and Kashmir enjoyed special status which allowed it to enact its own laws. The provisions also protected the region's citizenship law, which barred outsiders from settling in and owning land in the territory.

In order to quell popular protests, the Indian government has taken in political detainees and imposed restriction on movement, a move several rights groups including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have condemned.

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over the scenic Himalayan region which they control partly but claim in full.



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