Violence in Indian Kashmir is terrorism: Nisar

Interior minister presides over one-day meeting of home ministers from countries belonging to SAARC

Interior minister presides over one-day meeting of home ministers from countries belonging to SAARC. PHOTO: AP

Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan on Thursday termed violence on Kashmiris by Indian security forces as 'terrorism.'

Addressing a one-day meeting of home ministers from countries belonging to South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (Saarc), Nisar said there was a difference between fighting for freedom and terrorism.

“We have seen brutal force being used against unarmed civilians. It is important to respect the fundamental human rights of the people and not suppress freedom struggle in the name of fight against terrorism,” Nisar said during his address as Pakistan’s interior minister.

Earlier, the minister left his seat of speaker to address all issues point by point raised by home ministers of the member countries.

“I very firmly and strongly believe that instead of engaging in blame game and taking swipes at each other we should take time out to reflect and then sit down together and try to work out the problems.”

India sticks to no bilateral meetings at SAARC huddle

Nisar went on to claim that Pakistan suffered heavy losses in the fight against terrorism and the country condemned every single incident of terror which claimed innocent lives.

"Mumbai, Dhaka and other incidents like Pathankot which are highly condemnable does not mean that dozens and scores and in fact hundreds of terror incidents taking place almost on a daily basis in Pakistan are any less condemnable," he said.


The interior minister’s remarks come in the backdrop of escalating tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals over unrest in disputed Kashmir.

The Saarc group includes India, Pakistan, Nepal, the Maldives, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh.

The rivalry between Islamabad and New Delhi has hampered efforts to transform Saarc into a meaningful platform for integration in South Asia, which accounts for a fifth of the world’s population but less than a tenth of its economic output.

Both countries have fought two of their three wars since independence over Kashmir, which each rules in part but claims in full. The line of control dividing the Himalayan region still broadly runs along the front when the guns fell silent in 1948.

Rajnath Singh, Nisar barely shake hands at Saarc meet

The strain in India-Pakistan ties was sharply evident as Chaudhry Nisar and his Indian counterpart Rajnath Singh barely shook hands as they met for the first time at a SAARC conference, NDTV reported.

Nisar was receiving ministers at the entrance of the Serena Hotel when the two came face to face. The leaders barely touched their hands and did not even pose for a photograph as Rajnath moved towards the meeting hall.

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