India has so far issued over 3.4 million fake domicile certificates to non-Kashmiris in a bid to change the demography of Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), the Foreign Office spokesperson said on Thursday.
“India continues with its design to change the demographic structure of the occupied territory in clear violation of international law, including the 4th Geneva Convention,” Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri said during his weekly press briefing.
“India has already issued over 3.4 million fake domicile certificates,” he added.
He said the people of IIOJK have been facing an “unprecedented military siege, communications blockade and suspension of fundamental freedoms” for the past 22 months.
“The lives and livelihoods of the Kashmiri people have been severely affected in the aftermath of India’s illegal and unilateral actions on Aug 5, 2019,” he said, referring to the day when the Modi-led government revoked the special status of the disputed Himalayan region and split it into two federally administered territories.
Simultaneously, it locked the region down, detained thousands of people, imposed movement restrictions and enforced a communications blackout, according to rights group Amnesty International.
“India continues to employ rape, torture, degrading treatment and killings of Kashmiri women as instruments of state terrorism in the occupied territory,” Chaudhri said in comments on the anniversary of the 2009 rape and murder of two Kashmiri women, Aasiya and Nilofar Jan.
“India’s gross and systematic violations of human rights in the occupied territory and lack of accountability of the perpetrators have been widely documented by a number of independent commissions, human rights organisations, global media and civil society organisations, including the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.”
The official said India’s “continuing crimes against the Kashmiri people are a solemn reminder to the international community of its collective responsibility to hold India accountable”.
‘Permanent solution for Palestine issue’
Pakistan views the May 21 ceasefire as a welcome development but “we once again reiterate the need for permanent resolution of the Palestine issue,” the FO spokesperson said.
“Pakistan believes that a viable, independent, and contiguous Palestinian state based on internationally agreed parameters with the pre-1967 borders, and Al-Quds Al-Sharif [Jerusalem] as its capital is the only way forward to the Palestine issue,” he stressed.
The UN Human Rights Council’s resolution “to establish a standing international Commission of Inquiry to investigate the human rights violations by Israel … represents global resolve to end systemic impunity and injustice and begin a process of meaningful accountability,” the official added.
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