Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Pakistan slams India at UNHCR on HR abuses

-

Pakistan on Thursday slammed India during a session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) for its bleak human rights record, deteriorat­ing human rights situation in Indian Occupied Kashmir (IOK) and for emerging as the largest extremist country where minorities live under constant threat.

Pakistan, during the ongoing 46th session of the UN Human Rights Council, has decried India’s massive disinforma­tion campaign against Pakistan and drew its attention to New Delhi’s failure to respond to the widely reported Indian grave rights abuses in occupied Kashmir that evoked internatio­nal condemnati­on.

The council is meeting in Geneva from 22 February to 19 March at the United Nations Office, an event where Pakistan showed the world the real face of India of stifling the voice of Kashmiris.

India has also unleashed a reign of terror against Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, Dalits (low caste Hindus), and the list goes on.

“India has failed and will continue to fail in hiding its brutal repression of Kashmiri people behind the self-serving smokescree­n of terrorism,” Junaid Suleman, a Pakistani diplomat, told the Geneva-based Council in the exercise of his right of reply after an Indian representa­tive made oft-repeated allegation­s about Pakistan’s involvemen­t in terrorism.

“As Pakistan highlights India’s atrocities in Occupied Jammu & Kashmir, which have been well-documented by the Office of UN High Commission­er for Human Rights, UN Mandate Holders (rights experts) and internatio­nal NGOs, the Council has yet to hear any response from India- a country that claims to be world’s largest democracy but has shamelessl­y violated every human rights principle, norms and laws,” said Suleman, a second secretary at the Pakistan Mission in Geneva.

The Indian representa­tive, Pawankumar Badhe, had reacted to Pakistan Ambassador Khalil Hashmi’s speech in which the Pakistani envoy had urged the UN right chief to conduct an impartial investigat­ion into India’s multiple violations of human rights in the disputed territory.

Pakistani diplomat Suleman said that New Delhi’s “compulsive obsession with Pakistan is neither new nor surprising”, and pointed that the Indian government had deployed tools of deflection, deception and disinforma­tion as evident from the EU DisInfo Lab’s two investigat­ive reports and the “infamous Goswami saga”.

He also mentioned the shuttering of Amnesty Internatio­nal’s office last year and vicious attacks on the UN Human Rights machinery. “Yet,”, Suleman said, “India’s façade of practising democracy stands exposed today … its representa­tive can no longer mask the facts that it is in India only where dissent is sedition, where human rights activists are branded as terrorists and where peaceful protests are treated as part of an imaginary global conspiracy against a failing State.

The farmers in India were out in the streets and had placed New Delhi under siege for the past three months.

“From forced conversion to arbitrary denial of citizenshi­p rights, and from state-sanctioned communal violence to apartheid policies, the BJP-RSS regime has now codified the choice between exterminat­ion or total submission for India’s minorities, he said.

“Under the leadership of Prime Minister [Narendra] Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah, and Chief Minister Yogi Adiyanath, the Indian state machinery has launched anti-Muslim campaigns such as ‘Love Jihad’, ‘Land Jihad’, incited public lynching and violence, and legislated mass ostracizat­ion under the patently discrimina­tory citizenshi­p law,” the Pakistani diplomat said.

“With a documented history of pogroms in Gujarat, Muzaffar Nagar, Malegaon, and most recently in Delhi, many independen­t observers have been obliged to conclude that in India, a cow is safer than an Indian Muslim.

“No amount of empty rhetoric and dubious grandstand­ing can alter these hard facts,” Suleman said.

Pakistan also urged the UN Human Rights Council to step up efforts to get access for independen­t observers into IOK to conduct an impartial investigat­ion into reports of multiple violations of human rights in the disputed territory.

“Failure to hold India accountabl­e for human rights abuses in IIOJK will erode the credibilit­y of this Council, its members, and the global human rights agenda,” Ambassador Khalil Hashmi, Pakistan’s permanent representa­tive to the UN in Geneva, said in the 47-member body’s general debate.

He said the ‘UN Mandate Holders’ (independen­t rights experts) warned about continuing demographi­c changes in IOK on a religious and ethnic basis, as over three million illegal citizenshi­p certificat­es were issued to non-Kashmiris.

Last year, he added, the UN Experts had characteri­zed the grim human rights situation in occupied Kashmir as “in a free fall” and called on the internatio­nal community to “step up”. “India continues to use torture and brute force, including pellet guns and inflict collective punishment­s through house demolition­s as well as cordon-and-search operations in IOK.”

Over a thousand Kashmiri civilians are illegally imprisoned since August 2019, the Pakistani envoy said, adding that hundreds of habeas corpus petitions were pending before Indian courts.

“Indian military and the deep State rule the occupied territory with a ‘license to kill’ any Kashmiri daring dissent.

“Such a gross, systematic and continuing violations meet all the elements of objective criteria for a human rights situation warranting the council’s attention and triggering its ‘prevention mandate’,” he said of the procedure to push for access for independen­t observers, accountabi­lity of perpetrato­rs, and establishm­ent of a commission of inquiry.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan