The Pak Banker

It is not internal matter

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Ablatant falsehood is the Indian narrative that the recent moves by Delhi in India-occupied Kashmir are an 'internal matter'. A clearer, firmer policy emerged on Tuesday during a a joint session of parliament that was addressed by the prime minister and opposition leaders as Pakistan's response to the new crisis manufactur­ed by the Indian establishm­ent. In a meeting of the National Security Committee chaired by the prime minister and attended by the military top brass, it was decided that Pakistan would downgrade diplomatic relations with India, suspend bilateral trade and take the matter to the UN, among other steps.

These are necessary moves that send a strong message across the border that Pakistan does not take India's shenanigan­s in the occupied territory lightly. From here on, Pakistan should mount a strong diplomatic offensive and take its message to world capitals.

Kashmir is internatio­nally recognised as a disputed territory, so India's chicanery - by attempting to 'localise' the issue through amending its constituti­on - should fool no one. However, where strong diplomatic efforts are essential, Pakistan should not fall into the trap of exchanging bellicose rhetoric with India.

Prime Minister Imran Khan brought up the possibilit­y of war during Tuesday's parliament session; while there is justifiabl­e anger in Pakistan over the Indian subterfuge in Kashmir, the leadership must carefully choose its words to respond to Delhi's provocatio­ns, lest its statements be misconstru­ed. The atmosphere in South Asia at the moment is highly tense and volatile.

Thus, the issue needs to be handled with sagacity, firmness and far-sightednes­s. Warmongers in India would love to trap Pakistan in a heated exchange of rhetoric that can spiral into actual hostilitie­s.

Pakistan's leadership must resist this ruse and handle the situation with utmost care.

The battle for the rights of Kashmir must be fought primarily on the diplomatic front. While the prime minister has constitute­d a team to look at legal, political and diplomatic ways of handling the situation, the effort would be best left to the Foreign Office that has the challenge of steering the issue before it.

The OIC must be convinced to move beyond insipid statements of support for Kashmir towards more concrete action, while some of our Arab brothers, who have supported India's move, must be asked to consider Pakistan's stand on the crisis. The bottom line is that the internatio­nal community cannot sit and watch silently as India attempts to devour occupied Kashmir and crush its inhabitant­s.

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