Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Pak rejects India’s protests, rakes up J&K

- Imtiaz Ahmad imtiaz.ahmed@htlive.com

ISLAMABAD: PAKISTAN’S FOREIGN OFFICE RESPONDED BY DISMISSING INDIA’S PROTESTS AGAINST THE GILGITBALT­ISTAN ORDER 2018

Pakistan rejected India’s protests against its decision to give greater administra­tive and financial powers to Gilgit-Baltistan and its claim over Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) even as it raked up the issue of alleged human rights abuses by Indian security forces.

India has strongly objected to a decision on Saturday by Pakistan’s National Security Committee, the top body of civilian and military officials, to give greater administra­tive and financial powers to Gilgit-Baltistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir.

On Sunday, India summoned Pakistan’s deputy high commission­er Syed Haider Shah and told him that any move to alter the status of any territory under Islamabad’s “forcible occupation” would have no legal basis.

Pakistan’s foreign office responded by dismissing India’s protests against the Gilgit-Baltistan Order 2018 and New Delhi’s claim over J&K. India’s deputy high commission­er JP Singh was summoned to the foreign ministry and a demarche on the issue was handed over to him.

Foreign office spokesman Muhammad Faisal contended that the entire state of J&K was a “disputed” territory and several UN Security Council resolution­s stipulated the status of the region should be determined through a plebiscite.

“Everything from history to law to morality to the situation on the ground belies India’s spurious claim,” Faisal said. He added that “baseless Indian propaganda” about Gilgit-Baltistan would not “cover up the atrocities being perpetrate­d by Indian forces” or divert the world community’s attention from the situation in Kashmir.

Faisal called on India to create the conditions for implementi­ng the UN Security Council resolution­s so that “this long-standing dispute between India and Pakistan is peacefully resolved in accordance with the wishes of the Kashmiri people”.

Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi has said the new Gilgit-Baltistan Order 2018 has transferre­d all powers to the people, who will enjoy the same rights as the residents of Pakistan’s four provinces.

“All subjects under the 18th Constituti­onal Amendment have been shifted to the GilgitBalt­istan government. Yet if the Gilgit-Baltistan representa­tives have some more demands, we can include (them) in the order (as) our government is still left for some days,” Abbasi told a joint session of the Gilgit-Baltistan assembly and council on Sunday. However, the leader of opposition in the Assembly, Mohammad Shafi Khan, said the people had rejected the order.

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