Deccan Chronicle

UN needs to stay out of India-Pak matters

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It is a pity that UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres made it a point to suggest recently that he had met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif a few times in order to urge them to bilaterall­y compose their difference­s on Kashmir. It was decidedly undiplomat­ic of the UN chief to say this to the media when he had been informed by the Indian PM earlier that the UN’s intercessi­on was uncalled for, and that the two nations had agreements between them underlinin­g that Kashmir was a matter to be resolved peacefully through the bilateral process alone and through no other aegis — either that of the United Nations or that of any country.

Alas, it became necessary for the Indian government to reiterate this stand before the press on Thursday as the UN chief had chosen to go public. A few weeks before Mr Guterres brought up the question of Kashmir, the US ambassador to the UN, Ms Nikki Haley, who has Cabinet rank, had been outspoken on the subject. With terrorist activity by Pakistani proxies increasing in the Kashmir Valley this year, she had practicall­y threatened that the US would not stand idly by and hinted that her country could involve itself in settling the Kashmir question. She had also indicated that Washington might work to get the matter discussed before the UN Security Council.

In this backdrop, it is logical to ask if the UN Secretary-General’s recent articulati­on is from the standpoint of a neutral observer or is he becoming someone’s voice?

Needless to say, US meddling has resolved nothing anywhere. Afghanista­n is still a running sore 16 years after the arrival of US troops in that country with the professed aim of dismantlin­g radical extremism and terrorism unleashed on the hapless Afghan people by armed extremists, who find sanctuarie­s, weapons and training, and cash across the border in Pakistan. Ms Haley and Mr Guterres both seem to pretend that they do not know why Afghanista­n remains at war. In the same way, they give the impression of condoning terrorist interventi­on by Pakistan in many parts of India, especially Kashmir.

India’s ambassador to the UN, Syed Akbaruddin, did well on Thursday to urge the Security Council to find out why terrorist violence had reached dangerous levels in Afghanista­n, threatenin­g the efforts of “one of the collective military efforts in the world”, meaning the US-led Nato military contingent­s, and where the sanctuarie­s and sources of military supply of the terrorists were.

Pakistan should be named, shamed and sanctioned by the UN for perpetrati­ng terrorist violence in Afghanista­n and in Kashmir. Let the Secretary-General not issue unsought advice. Besides, where has the UN intervened successful­ly?

Pakistan should be named, shamed and sanctioned by the UN for perpetrati­ng terrorist violence in Afghanista­n and Kashmir. Let the Secretary-General not issue unsought advice

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