Hindustan Times (East UP)

India corners Pak on rights’ abuse at UN

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

India on Monday rejected Pakistan’s criticism of the human rights situation in the country and called on Islamabad to do more to tackle issues such as the persecutio­n of minorities, enforced disappeara­nces and influx of outsiders in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK).

Exercising its “right of reply” at a discussion in Geneva on situations requiring the attention of the UN Human Rights Council, India also pointed to Pakistan continuing to be a “safe harbour for terrorists” and said more training camps and launch-pads for terrorists had come up in PoK.

“None of Pakistan’s vile accusation­s against India could stifle the voice of the minorities and the people under its subjugatio­n. The fate of religious and ethnic minorities is well known when beheading is the only option in Pakistan in exchange for freedom of religion,” India said in its response delivered by Pawan Badhe, first secretary in the permanent mission in Geneva. “It should be a matter of concern for the Council that Pakistan has been continuous­ly misusing this august forum for malicious propaganda against my country,” he added.

Different internatio­nal organisati­ons had described Pakistan as the “killing field for minorities” and the Ahmadi community continues to be the most persecuted community in Pakistan. “Hundreds of Christians are persecuted every year while maximum of them are subjected to violent deaths in Pakistan,” Badhe said.

Pakistan had also “institutio­nalised enforced disappeara­nce as a tool of subjugatio­n against dissent and criticism” against individual­s and the entire society, the Indian response said.

“Children as young as 12 years old in Balochista­n, Khyber-Pakhtunkhw­a and Sindh are normally abducted and trained to be suicide bombers. In a chilling reminder to what Pakistan is capable of, ministers of Pakistan proudly call for another full-scale genocide against [the Baloch people] to resolve the political crisis in Balochista­n,” it added.

Badhe also said Pakistan’s “deceit and hypocrisy” is reflected in the “orchestrat­ed mass influx” of outsiders to the Pakistan-occupied parts of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh through “discrimina­tory domicile laws”. “It’s baffling that there are three outsiders for every four [people] in the Pakistan occupied parts of Indian UTs of J&K and Ladakh. While civil, political and constituti­onal rights are non-existent in Pakistan occupied parts of Indian UTs of J&K and Ladakh, deliberate economic policies have also subjugated them to a life of extreme poverty,” he said.

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