Settling the Kashmir issue
For
decades, India has defied with impunity all the UN resolutions on Kashmir,
which call for the holding of a “free and fair” plebiscite under UN supervision
to determine the wishes of the Kashmiri people. Not just this. A massive
Indian military campaign has been on, especially since the start of the
popular Kashmiri uprising in 1989, to usurp the basic rights of the Kashmiri
people. Killing, torture, rape and other inhuman practices by nearly 600,000
Indian soldiers are a norm of the day in Occupied Kashmir.
The
Kashmir problem will be solved the moment international community decides
to intervene in the matter—to put an end to Indian state terrorism in
Occupied Kashmir and to implement UN resolutions. These resolutions recommend
demilitarization of Kashmir (through withdrawal of all outside forces),
followed immediately by a plebiscite under UN supervision to determine
the future status of Kashmir. The intervention of the international community
is all the more necessary, given the consistent Indian opposition to both
bilateral and multilateral options to settle the Kashmir issue. Such an
intervention is also urgently required to stop the ever-growing Indian
brutalities against the innocent Muslim people of Kashmir, who have been
long denied their just right to self-determination