ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has urged the UN Human Rights Council to step up efforts to get access for independent observers into Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK) to conduct an impartial investigation into reports of multiple violations of human rights in the disputed territory.
Speaking in the 47-member body’s general debate, Pakistan’s permanent representative to the UN in Geneva, Khalil Hashmi, said that failure to hold India accountable for human rights abuses in the illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir will erode the credibility of this council, its members, and the global human rights agenda.
The Pakistani envoy thanked the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet, for voicing concern over the rights situation in the Indian illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
He said that just last week, the ‘UN Mandate Holders’ (independent rights experts) warned about continuing demographic changes in IIOJ&K on religious and ethnic basis, as over 3 million illegal citizenship certificates have been issued to non-Kashmiris.
Earlier this week, Ambassador Hashmi pointed out, another group of UN experts termed attacks by Indian forces against Kashmiri human right defenders and journalists as “pattern of silencing independent reporting through the threat of criminal sanction”.
Last year, he added, the UN Experts had characterized the grim human rights situation in IIOJK “in a free fall” and called on the international community to “step up”.
“India continues to use torture and brute force, including pellet guns and inflict collective punishments through house demolitions as well as cordon-and-search operations in IIOJ&K.”
Over a thousand Kashmiri civilians have been illegally imprisoned since August 2019, the Pakistani envoy said, adding that hundreds of habeas corpus petitions are pending before Indian courts.
Armed with draconian laws, facilitated by a pliant judiciary acting as a veritable arm of occupation and oppression, he said Indian forces continued to act with absolute impunity.
Pointing out that IIOJ&K has no civilian government since 2016, Ambassador Hashmi said that even the thin veneer of autonomy and rule of law now stood effaced. “Indian military and the deep state rule the occupied territory with a ‘license to kill’ any Kashmiri daring dissent. Such gross, systematic and continuing violations meet all the elements of objective criteria for a human rights situation warranting the Council’s attention and triggering its ‘prevention mandate’”, he said.