ISLAMABAD: Chairman Senate Foreign Affairs Committee Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed believes that Pakistan has got a ‘strategic space’ which it should use for the benefit of the Kashmiri freedom movement. He was speaking at a webinar hosted by Islamabad Policy Institute (IPI) on ‘Pakistan’s Kashmir Strategy: An Assessment and Future Outlook’.
The senate committee’s chief said that Pakistan would, however, first have to develop clarity in its own policies on Kashmir and India and assess Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Hindutva project, the think tank said in a media statement on Thursday.
Senator Mushahid noted that since Modi has been put on a defensive by India’s aggravating internal situation, Pakistan has got a ‘geo-political breather’; US needs Pakistan’s help for getting itself out of the conflict in Afghanistan; the American foreign policy would be less interventionist after the latest developments within US, and the progress that China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is making.
He said it is now up to Pakistan to use this opportunity for alleviating the sufferings of Kashmiris and reiterating in an emphatic manner its solid stance over Kashmiris’ struggle for the right of self-determination.
The Senator also called for strengthening the national consensus on Kashmir, by keeping it above party politics in the domestic context.
One of the key recommendations of the webinar for Pakistani political parties was that they should in the upcoming elections for Azad Jammu and Kashmir’s Legislature focus exclusively on issues related to Kashmir itself instead of campaigning on divisive political controversies.
The speakers, moreover, touched upon the debate on Article 257 of Constitution of Pakistan, which started after Prime Minister Imran Khan on February 5 suggested that Pakistan could offer independence to Kashmiris if they accede to it through the plebiscite held by the United Nations. They were of the opinion that PM Khan’s assertion was meant to convey Pakistan’s support for Kashmiris’ struggle which was not just for getting a piece of land, but for the liberation and attainment of rights of oppressed Kashmiris.
Former Defense Secretary Lt Gen (R) Asif Yasin Malik said that little was being done to create awareness among the people in other countries. His view was that once people are better informed about the issue, they would then pressure their respective governments to revisit their policies on Kashmir and act for addressing the situation. In this regard, he said, parliamentary diplomacy has an important role to play and Kashmir committee of the parliament should be a politically neutral forum.
Former Foreign Secretary Shamshad Ahmad Khan, in his remarks, said that maintaining ‘status quo’ is not a solution of the dispute. He emphasized that there would have to be a peaceful settlement of the Kashmir conflict involving all three parties to the dispute. He observed that Pakistan was in “a tight spot” and India wanted it to accept Aug 5, 2019 annexation of the occupied territory as a fait accompli. He said that the current government, through some aggressive diplomatic efforts, has placed Kashmir high on the global agenda.
Executive Director IPI Prof Sajjad Bokhari, while underscoring the challenge posed by the attempts to change Kashmir’s demography, noted that Muslims were earlier converted into a minority in Jammu and Modi government’s steps since Aug 5, 2019 are part of the ‘final push’ for wiping away the Kashmir dispute and erasing the political identity of Kashmiris.
“In essence, what began in Jammu is now being completed in the Valley,” he maintained.
The senate committee’s chief said that Pakistan would, however, first have to develop clarity in its own policies on Kashmir and India and assess Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Hindutva project, the think tank said in a media statement on Thursday.
Senator Mushahid noted that since Modi has been put on a defensive by India’s aggravating internal situation, Pakistan has got a ‘geo-political breather’; US needs Pakistan’s help for getting itself out of the conflict in Afghanistan; the American foreign policy would be less interventionist after the latest developments within US, and the progress that China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is making.
He said it is now up to Pakistan to use this opportunity for alleviating the sufferings of Kashmiris and reiterating in an emphatic manner its solid stance over Kashmiris’ struggle for the right of self-determination.
The Senator also called for strengthening the national consensus on Kashmir, by keeping it above party politics in the domestic context.
One of the key recommendations of the webinar for Pakistani political parties was that they should in the upcoming elections for Azad Jammu and Kashmir’s Legislature focus exclusively on issues related to Kashmir itself instead of campaigning on divisive political controversies.
The speakers, moreover, touched upon the debate on Article 257 of Constitution of Pakistan, which started after Prime Minister Imran Khan on February 5 suggested that Pakistan could offer independence to Kashmiris if they accede to it through the plebiscite held by the United Nations. They were of the opinion that PM Khan’s assertion was meant to convey Pakistan’s support for Kashmiris’ struggle which was not just for getting a piece of land, but for the liberation and attainment of rights of oppressed Kashmiris.
Former Defense Secretary Lt Gen (R) Asif Yasin Malik said that little was being done to create awareness among the people in other countries. His view was that once people are better informed about the issue, they would then pressure their respective governments to revisit their policies on Kashmir and act for addressing the situation. In this regard, he said, parliamentary diplomacy has an important role to play and Kashmir committee of the parliament should be a politically neutral forum.
Former Foreign Secretary Shamshad Ahmad Khan, in his remarks, said that maintaining ‘status quo’ is not a solution of the dispute. He emphasized that there would have to be a peaceful settlement of the Kashmir conflict involving all three parties to the dispute. He observed that Pakistan was in “a tight spot” and India wanted it to accept Aug 5, 2019 annexation of the occupied territory as a fait accompli. He said that the current government, through some aggressive diplomatic efforts, has placed Kashmir high on the global agenda.
Executive Director IPI Prof Sajjad Bokhari, while underscoring the challenge posed by the attempts to change Kashmir’s demography, noted that Muslims were earlier converted into a minority in Jammu and Modi government’s steps since Aug 5, 2019 are part of the ‘final push’ for wiping away the Kashmir dispute and erasing the political identity of Kashmiris.
“In essence, what began in Jammu is now being completed in the Valley,” he maintained.