Kashmir not part of India: Pakistan

UNITED NATIONS - Pakistan has firmly rejected an Indian claim to Kashmir as an "integral part" of India, stating it was an internationally-recognised disputed territory, as representatives of the two countries sparred over the decades-old issue at the United Nations.
"The legal and factual background of Jammu & Kashmir dispute is quite clear and efforts to mislead or confuse the international community would not succeed," Diyar Khan, a Minister at the Pakistan Mission to the United Nations, told the General Assembly's Third Committee, which deals with Social, humanitarian and cultural questions. "Kashmir is not and cannot be an integral part of India," the Pakistani diplomat said, adding, that the disputed nature of State was well established by several UN Security Council resolutions that call for a settlement of this problem through a free and impartial plebiscite under the auspices of the United Nations.
Diyar Khan was reacting to a statement by Indian delegate Rattan Lal Kataria, who harped on the same old tune that Kashmir was it "integral part" and that Pakistan was in illegal occupation of a part of that "Indian State".
He also claimed that people in Indian-occupied Kashmir had regularly participated in "free, fair and open elections."
Kataria, a member of Indian Parliament, was responding to a strong statement made by the Pakistani Ambassador Maleeha Lodhi in support of the Kashmiri people's right to self-determination on Monday. Diyar Khan, who was speaking in right of reply to the Indian delegates assertions, referred to the argument that Kashmiris had already exercised their right to self-determination through elections, and said it was a fact known to all that elections in Indian-occupied Kashmir were not only not recognised by the UN Security Council but also rejected by the people of Kashmir and their representative political leadership.
The Security Council resolutions had also clarified that no electoral exercise conducted by Indian authorities in Jammu and Kashmir could be accepted as substitute to a free and impartial plebiscite under the UN auspices.
About the Indian allegations of terrorism, he called it a motivated campaign to divert attention from the real issue, stating such tactics would not set aside the Kashmiri’s inalienable right to self-determination.
The purpose of Indian allegations, he said, was to force Pakistan to stop raising the issue of Kashmir at the UN.
Referring to the charge that Pakistan was occupying parts of Kashmir, Diyar Khan asked India to leave this question to the people of Kashmir.
"If only India would agree to the UN plebiscite, as we do, the exercise of this free choice by the people of Jammu and Kashmir would clarify, once and for all, as to who is the real occupying force in Kashmir.”
Another India’s delegate Mayank Joshi, speaking in his right of reply, said the statement delivered by the Pakistani representative on Kashmir was "incompatible with the universally accepted principles" underlined by those of the United Nations Charter and, therefore, rejected his comments.


Again taking the floor, Pakistani diplomat Diyar Khan said his country was not interfering in the internal affairs of India by raising the Kashmir issue at the United Nations. "May I also remind the Indian delegate that India itself brought this dispute before the United Nations," he said.
"India is a large country and we respect its territorial integrity when it comes to its integral parts, but Kashmir is not the integral part."

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