Pakistan Monday strongly condemned the continuing extrajudicial killings in staged encounters and fake cordon-and-search operations, as well as arbitrary detentions and crimes against humanity by Indian occupation forces in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir. In a statement, the Foreign Office spokesperson said, the deteriorating security and human rights situation in the occupied territory was a matter of grave concern for the international community. “We also strongly condemn India’s ongoing propaganda to malign the indigenous and just struggle of the people of IIOJK for their right to self-determination by raising the bogey of terrorism,” he added. He said Pakistan had also been alerting the international community about India’s track record of orchestrating false-flag operations to undermine the Kashmir freedom movement. “Equally condemnable is the RSS-BJP combine’s ploy to demonize Kashmiri Muslims, by stirring up communal tensions.” He said Pakistan called on India to halt its state-sponsored terrorism, refrain from propaganda against Kashmiris, lift its suffocating military siege and let the people of IIOJK exercise their right to self-determination as promised in various UN Security Council resolutions. Minister for Foreign Affairs Shah Mehmood Qureshi also condemned the unabated spate of extra-judicial killings of Kashmiris in IIOJK.
متعلقہ مضامین
-
Govt to bring ordinance for NAB chief’s appointment
-
Acid attack on Karachi transgender causes 60pc body burns
-
NAB submits reply in assets reference case against Ishaq Dar
-
Dengue fever kills another person in Islamabad
-
Asad Umar urges media to foil international campaign against CPEC: Asad Umar
-
Interior Ministry bars former PM Gillani from Rome-bound flight
-
NAB opposes acquittal pleas of co-accused in reference against Dar
-
Sri Lanka is not an Indian colony
-
KP, COPHC to boost cooperation on Gwadar Port
-
Pak-China Technical Institute in Gwadar to provide scholarships
-
Pak-China Technical Institute in Gwadar to provide scholarships
-
PML-N terms NAB Ord a ‘black law’