China’s bid to rake up Kashmir in UNSC fails
The Indian Express
Shubhajit Roy
China had earlier
managed to hold informal closed-door consultations on Kashmir in the UNSC on
August 16, 11 days after India revoked the special status of Jammu and Kashmir
under Article 370 on August 5.
A move by China to get the Kashmir
issue on the agenda for consultations in the United Nations Security Council
(UNSC) has been thwarted by other members led by the US and France.
China had earlier managed to hold
informal closed-door consultations on Kashmir in the UNSC on August 16, 11 days
after India revoked the special status of Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 on
August 5.
This time, sources said, Beijing sent
a note to the UNSC over the weekend to “echo the request” of Pakistan for a
briefing on Kashmir. On December 12, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood
Qureshi had written to the UNSC and expressed concern about a possible
escalation of the situation.
But the US, which holds the
presidency of the UNSC for December, did not yield to the latest request by
China. France also joined in and said that the Kashmir issue has to be
discussed bilaterally. “We have highlighted this several times recently,
including in New York,” French diplomatic sources said.
Chinese has withdrawn its request,
and no meeting on Kashmir will be held, sources said. The UNSC is now meeting
Tuesday on the issue of Sudan and South Sudan, as per their original schedule. China’s move was rebuffed at a time
when External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and Defence Minister Rajnath Singh are meeting their American
counterparts for the first 2+2 engagement. Singh reached New York Monday.
Delhi, meanwhile, rejected a
resolution passed unanimously Monday by Pakistan’s parliament, the National
Assembly, which referred to Kashmir and the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, and
condemned the Indian government over what it described as “discriminatory
legislation” and “human rights abuses”.
The Ministry of External Affairs
(MEA) responded by “categorically” rejecting the resolution. “It is a thinly
veiled attempt by Pakistan to further its false narrative on the issue of Jammu
& Kashmir and Ladakh. It seeks to provide justification for Pakistan’s
unrelenting support for cross-border terrorist activities in India. We are
confident that such attempts will fail,” it said.
It said the resolution is a “poorly
disguised” effort to divert attention from Pakistan’s “appalling treatment and
persecution of its own religious minorities”. The demographics of these
minorities, whether Hindu, Christian, Sikh or other faiths, in Pakistan speak
for themselves, it said.
It also said the resolution
“intentionally mischaracterizes the objectives of the Citizenship Amendment Act
2019. This Act gives citizenship to foreigners from selected countries who are
persecuted religious minorities. It does not take away the citizenship of any
Indian irrespective of her or his faith.”
“It is laughable that the National
Assembly of Pakistan, that has itself passed discriminatory legislation against
religious minorities, should point fingers at others. We call upon Pakistan to
engage in serious self-introspection rather than to falsely accuse others of
what they themselves are guilty of,” the MEA statement said.
“Pakistan would do well to remember
that India is the world’s largest democracy, that all its Governments have been
freely and fairly elected through universal adult franchise, and that all
Indians irrespective of faith enjoy equal rights under the Constitution. We
urge Pakistan to similarly aspire to these ideals,” it said.
In Geneva, Pakistan Prime
Minister Imran Khan claimed
at the Global Forum on Refugees that millions of Muslims could flee India due
to the curfew in Kashmir and India’s new citizenship law. “We are worried there not only could
be a refugee crisis, we are worried it could lead to a conflict between two
nuclear-armed countries… Our country will not be able to accommodate more
refugees,” he said, urging the world to “step in now”.
In response to a query on Khan’s
statement, MEA spokesperson Raveesh Kumar said: “Pakistan’s Prime Minister
Imran Khan has once again peddled familiar falsehoods at a multilateral
platform to advance his narrow political agenda by making gratuitous and unwarranted
remarks on matters entirely internal to India. It should now be clear to the
entire world that this is an established pattern of his habitual and compulsive
abuse of global forums.”
Kumar said: “It has been the
unfortunate experience of most of Pakistan’s neighbours that actions by that
country have had adverse consequences next door. Over the past 72 years, the
Islamic Republic of Pakistan has systematically persecuted all of its
minorities, forcing most of them to flee to India. Moreover, Prime Minister
Khan wishes the world forgets what his Army did in 1971 to the people of the
erstwhile East Pakistan. Pakistan must act to protect and promote the rights of
its own minorities and co-religionists.”
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