Pakistan terms Kashmir a legal issue, demands
plebiscite
Pakistan on Thursday asserted that Kashmir
is a “legal issue” and must be resolved through plebiscite as per the
aspirations of the Kashmiri people.
At the weekly briefing
in Islamabad, Foreign Office spokesperson Tasnim Aslam also made it clear that
India-Pakistan talks were not a substitute to the U.N. resolutions on Kashmir
which envisage plebiscite in the region.
“Kashmir is a legal
issue also and its legal position demands that the dispute must be resolved as
per the aspirations of Kashmiri people through plebiscite,” she said.
Ms. Aslam said that
Simla Agreement between the two countries does not make U.N. resolutions
ineffective.
Her remarks come within
days of Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif raking up the Kashmir issue at the
U.N. General Assembly where he said the U.N. had passed resolutions to hold a
plebiscite in Jammu and Kashmir more than six decades ago.
“The people of Jammu and
Kashmir are still waiting for the fulfilment of that promise,” Mr. Sharif said.
India had strongly
rejected the “untenable comments” made by Mr. Sharif, asserting that the people
of the State have peacefully chosen their destiny in accordance with
universally accepted democratic principles.
Speaking at the UNGA,
Prime Minister Narendra Modi had offered to engage in a serious bilateral
dialogue “without the shadow of terrorism” while asking Pakistan to create an
“appropriate environment” for that.
At Thursday’s briefing,
Ms. Aslam also claimed that India never responded positively on Pakistan's
proposals to resolve the Siachen issue and for declaring Siachen a Peace Park
including demilitarisation of the territory.
The Foreign Office
spokesperson termed that Indian policy towards resolution of Siachen as
“inflexible”.
Former President Pervez
Musharraf had claimed that Pakistan and India were close to clinching a deal on
Siachen during his tenure. Ms. Aslam said India and Pakistan would have to
resume talks for the sake of sustainable peace in the region.
India had called off Foreign
Secretary-level talks in August after Pakistan's High Commissioner in New Delhi
Abdul Basit had met Kashmiri separatist leaders ahead of the meeting, ignoring
India's warning that the move could derail the parleys.Ms. Aslam saw nothing
wrong in Mr. Basit’s meeting with Hurriyat leaders, saying Pakistan regularly
consults with them.
http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/south-asia/pakistan-terms-kashmir-a-legal-issue-demands-plebiscite/article6468376.ece
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