The Sunday Guardian

Uri derailed sharif’s uN missioN

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s meetings in New York did highlight the Kashmir cause, but not as much as they would have, had there been no 18 September attack in Uri.

- REUTERS

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif left New York on Friday after five days of extensive lobbying for Kashmir at the United Nations and in bilateral meetings with world leaders.

According to an official of the Prime Minister’s media team, he will arrive home on Monday morning after spending the weekend in London, where one of his two sons resides on a permanent basis and has business interests.

Sharif’s meetings in New York did highlight the Kashmir cause, but not as much as they would have, had there had been no September 18 attack on an Indian army base in Uri which apparently was carried out by elements within the Indiaheld region.

Before the attack, prominent newspapers and television channels in the United States did a series of reports and articles on Kashmir, pointing out that Indian forces had killed more than 100 people and injured thousands in their efforts to suppress a peaceful civilian uprising.

After the Uri attack, however, the focus shifted to militancy and the possibilit­y of a war between Pakistan and India.

The warnings about a possible war between the two neighbours strengthen Pakistan’s argument that the Kashmir issue, if left unresolved, could cause a nuclear conflict in the region.

But the focus on militancy had a negative impact on the country’s efforts to show the world that the people of Kashmir were engaged in a peaceful struggle for their right to self-determinat­ion promised to them by the UN Security Council in 1948.

Pakistan’s position was reflected strongly in a statement of the Organisati­on of Islamic Cooperatio­n which not only condemned the Indian atrocities but also emphasised the need for giving the Kashmiri people the right to decide about their future.

In separate meetings with Prime Minister Sharif, other Muslim leaders also emphasised the two points, while Turkey announced its intention to send a factfindin­g mission to the Indiaheld region.

The UN Human Rights Council’s pledge to send a similar delegation also echoed at the General As- sembly and Pakistan invited it to send the team to Azad Kashmir to expose India’s claims about that part of the region.

Pakistan’s campaign to draw the world’s attention to the situation in India-held Kashmir also reflected in the US State Department’s statement on the issue, but only partially.

The department recognised the Kashmir issue as a bilateral dispute between Pakistan and India, rejecting the Indian claim that it was an internal issue.

But it also urged Pakistan to cooperate with India in investigat­ing the 18 September “terrorist attack” and to take immediate steps against “externally focused”groups like Lashkar- e-Taiba and Jaish- eMohammed.

“The United States is committed to our strong partnershi­p with the Indian

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan addresses the United Nations General Assembly in the Manhattan borough of New York, on Wednesday.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif of Pakistan addresses the United Nations General Assembly in the Manhattan borough of New York, on Wednesday.

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