THE DAY OF SOLIDARITY WITH KASHMIRIS!


5TH FEBRUARY:
THE DAY OF SOLIDARITY WITH KASHMIRIS!
M Raza Malik
Pakistanis, at home and across the globe, observe the Kashmir Solidarity Day on 5th February, every year, to renew the pledge to continue their all out support to their Kashmiri brethren who are engaged in a peaceful struggle to secure their inalienable right to self-determination.
The observance of the day since 1991 is aimed at conveying a loud and clear message to usurper India that the Kashmiris are not alone in their just struggle and sooner or later it will have to recognise their right to choose their fate by themselves as granted by the UN resolutions. Another objective of the commemoration of Kashmir Solidarity Day is to remind the world community of its obligations towards bringing about a peaceful resolution of the long-standing Kashmir dispute in accordance with the Kashmiris’ aspirations.
There are many legitimate and genuine reasons for the people of Pakistan to express solidarity with their oppressed Kashmiri brethren because both share strong bonds in respect of religion, geography, culture, aspirations and economy. The day is marked by seminars, conferences, demonstrations and rallies in Pakistan and other parts of the world to highlight important aspects of the Kashmir dispute and the state terrorism unleashed by India in the occupied territory. Through these activities, the international community is reminded that the unresolved conflict over Kashmir posed a threat to peace and stability in South Asia and the world at large.
It is a historical fact that India had illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir by landing its troops in Srinagar on 27th October, 1947, against the wishes of the Kashmiri people and in total disregard to the Partition Plan of the Indian subcontinent that had resulted in the formation of two new independent counties - Pakistan and India. The Partition Plan had given all the Princely States the choice to accede to either of the two countries. Being a Muslim majority State, Jammu and Kashmir was destined to become part of Pakistan, but Indian rulers in connivance with the British rulers and Maharaja Hari Singh destroyed the future of millions of Kashmiris under the so-called “Instrument of Accession” document - existence of which is rejected by many neutral observers including renowned British historian, Alistair Lamb.
Since that day, India’s brutal occupation has been the cause of continued sufferings of the people of Jammu and Kashmir. Due to the atrocities of Indian troops, hundreds of thousands of Kashmiri people have migrated to Pakistan from the occupied territory since 1947 and main driving force behind their movement has been their strong emotional attachment to the country. This affiliation has been accepted even by the first Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, when he was asked a question in 1965 about holding of plebiscite in Kashmir, he had responded, “Kashmiris would vote to join Pakistan and we would lose it. No Indian government responsible for agreeing to a plebiscite would survive.”
Similarly, the ideological commonality between Pakistan and Jammu and Kashmir can well be gauged from the fact that the Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference had passed a resolution in its meeting in Srinagar on 19th July 1947, in favour of accession of Jammu and Kashmir to Pakistan. This development had happened about a month before the creation of Pakistan.
The slogans like “Long Live Pakistan” and “We want Pakistan” raised by the people of the occupied territory from time to time depict the unfathomable affection of the Kashmiris with Pakistan. Pakistani flags are hoisted in Jammu and Kashmir on the national days of the country, whereas such days of India are observed as black days.
The leaders of Pakistan never disappointed the Kashmiri people for the faith they repose on them. It was his commitment to the interests of the Kashmiri people that drove Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah to visit Jammu and Kashmir three times before 1947 (in 1926, 1936 and 1944). He had rightly said that Kashmir is the “Jugular Vein” of Pakistan. Former Prime Minister, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, had vowed to wage a thousand-year war for Kashmir.
The government of Pakistan has always extended unconditional moral, political and diplomatic support to the Kashmiris’ liberation struggle and advocated the peaceful settlement of the Kashmir dispute in line with the relevant UN resolutions as per the aspirations of Kashmiri people. President, Asif Ali Zardari, Prime Minister, Raja Pervaiz Ashraf, and other political leaders of Pakistan in their meetings with the visiting delegation of the All Parties Hurriyet Conference in December 2012, assured the visitors that any resolution contrary to the wishes of Kashmiris will not be acceptable to their country.
This continued support to the Kashmir cause has invited the Indian wrath during the past sixty-five years and Pakistan has to spend a major chunk of its financial resources on defence. Despite its difficulties and in presence of international pressure, Pakistan had to conduct nuclear tests in 1998 after India showed its clear intentions of military aggression against it.
Ironically, India presents itself as the largest democracy of the world, but it has been using every undemocratic method to continue its illegal hold on Kashmir. On one side, it wants to compel Pakistan to give up its support to the Kashmiri people, while on the other, it has been resorting to the worst kind of state terrorism in occupied Kashmir to intimidate the Kashmiris into submission. Since 1989, when the people of Kashmir intensified their liberation struggle, the unabated state terrorism has resulted in the killing of nearly one lac innocent Kashmiris and disappearance of thousands in custody. This vicious cycle of killing has rendered over twenty-five thousand women widowed and around a hundred and ten thousand children orphaned.
There is no denying the fact that Indian brutalities have failed to suppress the freedom sentiment of the people of Kashmir. The forceful anti-India and pro-liberation demonstrations during 2008-2010 - when hundreds of thousands of people had thronged the streets of Srinagar and other towns of the occupied territory with the demand of right to self-determination - painted the real picture of the situation. However, instead of showing respect to the sentiments of these people, Indian troops and police personnel responded with bullets, teargas shells and batons. In 2010 alone, Indian forces had killed over 120 innocent people including women and children besides injuring thousands of others within a period of just few months.
Unfortunately, the world community could not rise to the occasion and its response to brutal killings by Indian forces in Kashmir was not up to the mark, as it failed to hold India responsible for the massacre of unarmed Kashmiris and as a result not a single trooper or policeman could be brought to justice so far.
Keeping in view the fact that the Kashmir dispute involves two nuclear-armed countries and a small incident could prove disastrous for the entire South Asia, it is high time for the world community to take steps to address this contentious problem. It needs to understand that due to the unrealistic and intransigent approach of India, the peace and stability of the entire South Asia are at stake. 5th February is a reminder to the world powers that they should use their influence on New Delhi to settle the conflict over Kashmir. At the same time the supreme sacrifices of Kashmiri people needed to be acknowledged besides India warrants to be censured for disrespecting the UN resolutions and continued human rights violations in occupied Kashmir. The 5th February reminds the world about the urgency involved in an early resolution of the Kashmir dispute for the global peace, security and prosperity.
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(The writer is working as Senior Editor at Kashmir Media Service, Islamabad, and can be reached at razamalik849@yahoo.com)


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