The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Pakistan takes aim at India over Kashmir at U.N.

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UNITED NATIONS — Pakistan’s prime minister took aim at India for its handling of the Kashmir situation Friday, pointedly accusing Indian leader Narendra Modi of “cruelty” in the Muslimmajo­rity region and warning of catastroph­e if the two nucleararm­ed nations tumbled into war.

Two of the world’s most influentia­l nations, China and Russia, were on the docket for later.

As protesters for both sides shouted outside the U.N. compound in New York City, Imran Khan said the actions of Modi’s government in the Indian portion of the disputed mountainou­s region of Kashmir were shortsight­ed and could end in a bloodbath.

Modi, in his address to world leaders an hour earlier, took a starkly different approach: While raising the specter of terrorism — a nod to the reasons he cited for clamping down on the region, angering Pakistan — he never uttered the word “Kashmir” and focused on India’s economic and infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over the Himalayan region and have been locked in a standoff since Aug. 5, when Modi stripped limited autonomy from the portion of Kashmir that India controls. The two nations’ appearance­s at the U.N. General Assembly annual meeting of leaders this week had been highly anticipate­d in both the region and on the meeting’s sidelines.

This year’s General Assembly has been punctuated by leaders’ absences as much as presences. While U.S. President Donald Trump and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani showed up, both Russia’s and China’s top officials, Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, opted to skip. North Korea sent a lowerlevel diplomat, and Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau stayed home to deal with an upcoming election.

Pakistan’s Khan said it would be folly to think that Kashmiris, kept home by curfews and fear of harsh treatment by Indian soldiers, would emerge from such a situation and simply return to daily life.

“I picture myself (if ) I’m a Kashmiri,” he said. “I’ve been locked up for 55 days. There’ve been rapes, (the) Indian army going into homes, soldiers. Would I want this humiliatio­n? Would I want to pick up a gun?”

Saying the United Nations had a responsibi­lity for robust involvemen­t in the problem, he said inaction would produce bad results.

“When a nucleararm­ed country fights to the end, it will have consequenc­es far beyond the borders. It will have consequenc­es for the world,” Khan said. “That’s not a threat. It’s a fair worry. Where are we headed?

For his part, Modi cast the fight against terror as something that produces success only with internatio­nal collaborat­ion.

“The lack of unanimity among us on the issue of terrorism dents those very principles that are the basis for the creation of the United Nations,” he said in his address. “A fragmented world,” he said, “is in the interest of no one.”

Modi has defended the decision to strip Kashmir of its limited autonomy as freeing the territory from separatism. His supporters welcomed the move.

 ?? Richard Drew / Associated Press ?? Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan addresses the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Friday.
Richard Drew / Associated Press Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan addresses the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Friday.

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