Pakistan slams India’s decision on G20 meetings

Ambassador Akram says these stage-managed events are designed to project false normalcy in occupied Jammu and Kashmir

Pakistan Permanent Representative to the UN Munir Akram told an open Council debate that the crime-terrorist nexus varied across different contexts. PHOTO: APP/FILE

UNITED NATIONS:

Pakistan has strongly protested India’s decision to hold Group of 20 meetings in the UN-recognised disputed territory of Jammu and Kashmir later this month, and urged New Delhi not to misuse its position as chair of the body of world’s largest economies to “advance their own national agenda”.

“These stage-managed events are designed to project a false normalcy in occupied Jammu and Kashmir,” Ambassador Munir Akram told a meeting of the Group of 77, which now has 134 members and is the United Nations’ biggest intergovernmental group of emerging countries.

India currently holds the rotating year-long presidency of the G20 and is set to host a leaders’ summit in New Delhi in early September.

The Wednesday’s meeting was convened to have India’s UN Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj viewpoint about the agenda of a series of meetings leading up to the summit, which included G20 and Youth 20 meetings in Srinagar and in Leh, in the neighbouring region of Ladakh.

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“In this context,” Ambassador Akram said, “Pakistan is obliged to register its strong protest at India’s decision to hold one or more G20 meetings in the UN-recognised disputed territory of Jammu and Kashmir, which India occupies in contravention of UN Security Council resolutions and where the right of self-determination of the Kashmiri people, and other fundamental rights, are being suppressed by an occupation force of 900,000 Indian troops”.

The Pakistani envoy reminded delegates of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and over a dozen Special Rapporteurs of the Human Rights Council, having asked India for access to Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir to investigate reports of gross violations of human rights.

“Instead of inviting G20 delegations,” Ambassador Akram added, “India should accede to the request of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, and the dozen or more human rights Special Rapporteurs, and invite them to occupied Kashmir, provide them unhindered access to the territory and its people and thus enable them to observe and report on the reality of the massive oppression in Indian occupied Jammu & Kashmir.”

Reacting to the Pakistani envoy’s statement, India’s Ambassador said her country’s position on Kashmir was well known.

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