In diplomatic spat at UN, Pakistan challenges Indian annexation of Kashmir

Pakistani diplomat Zulqarnain Chheena during the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 25, 2020. (Photo courtesy: UN)
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Updated 26 September 2020
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In diplomatic spat at UN, Pakistan challenges Indian annexation of Kashmir

  • India called Prime Minister Imran Khan’s UNGA speech 'full of lies, misinformation and warmongering'
  • In response, Pakistan said New Delhi had no claim on Kashmir other than that of a 'military occupier'

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani diplomat issued a strongly worded response to an Indian statement against Prime Minister Imran Khan’s speech at the United Nations General Assembly on Friday, saying that Jammu and Kashmir was an internationally recognized disputed territory that would never become a part of India.
Hours earlier, Khan described India as the only country in the world that was sponsoring Islamophobia and encouraging violence against its Muslim population. He briefed the international community on developments in Indian-administered Kashmir and claimed that New Delhi was planning a “false flag operation” in the region to implicate Pakistan and acquire an aggressive posture toward his country.
An Indian delegate, who left the UNGA hall when the world body played out the recorded statement of the Pakistani leader, returned to the venue later and described Khan’s speech as “full of lies, misinformation and warmongering.” He also described Kashmir as India’s “integral part,” saying that the only dispute in the region related to those areas of the Himalayan territory that were affiliated with Pakistan.
In a scathing riposte, Zulqarnain Chheena, a young Pakistani diplomat, negated the claim that Kashmir was an Indian territory.

 

 

“Before I start, I hope that the distinguished Indian delegate is present and listening,” he said while exercising his right to reply, “and not running away from the truth like his colleague did in the morning.”
“In Jammu and Kashmir, India has no other claim than that of a military occupier,” he continued. “It is compelled to use naked force to impose its occupation on an unwilling and oppressed people. Ask the people of Jammu and Kashmir and they will tell you emphatically: Jammu and Kashmir is not a part of India. It never was and never will be.”
Discussing the situation of Muslims in India, he mentioned Shaheen Bagh, a Muslim majority neighborhood in New Delhi, where protesters took to the streets against India’s controversial citizenship law in February and faced a violent response.
“Hindu zealots perpetrated a well-organized and orchestrated pogrom of Muslims in order to teach the ‘traitors’ a lesson,” Chheena said. “Countless Muslims were killed, their homes burned, their properties looted, their places of worship desecrated — all with the connivance and complicity of the Indian state.”
“The charred streets of Delhi not only expose the Hindutva ideology in all its intolerant glory, they also manifested the trusted method the Hindu extremists have resorted to — from Gujrat in 2002 to Delhi in 2020 — to address the ‘Muslim menace,’” he continued.
He said that India believed it could subdue the Kashmiri resistance through brute force, but this would not happen.
“The arc of the moral universe is long,” he quoted Martin Luther King Jr., “but it bends toward justice.”


UN experts slam Pakistan lawyer convictions

Updated 04 February 2026
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UN experts slam Pakistan lawyer convictions

  • Imaan Mazari, husband Hadi Ali Chattha were sentenced to 10 years last month for “anti-state” social media posts
  • Five UN special rapporteurs say couple jailed for exercising rights guaranteed by international human rights law

GENEVA, Switzerland: Five UN special rapporteurs on Wednesday condemned the conviction and lengthy jail sentences imposed on a prominent rights activist and her fellow lawyer husband in Pakistan over “anti-state” social media posts.

Imaan Mazari, a 32-year-old lawyer and vocal critic of Pakistan’s military, “disseminated highly offensive” content on X, according to an Islamabad court.

She and her husband Hadi Ali Chattha were jailed on January 25, with a court statement saying they “will have to remain in jail for 10 years.”

The UN experts said they had been jailed for “simply exercising rights guaranteed by international human rights law.”

“Lawyers, like other individuals, are entitled to freedom of expression. The exercise of this right should never be conflated with criminal conduct, especially not terrorism,” they said in a joint statement.

“Doing so risks undermining and criminalizing the work of lawyers and human rights defenders across Pakistan and has a chilling effect on civil society in the country.”

Mazari shot to prominence tackling some of Pakistan’s most sensitive topics while defending ethnic minorities, journalists facing defamation charges and clients branded blasphemers.

As a pro bono lawyer, Mazari has worked on some of the most sensitive cases in Pakistan, including the enforced disappearances of ethnic Balochs, as well as defending the community’s top activist, Mahrang Baloch.

Mazari and her husband have been the subject of multiple prosecutions in the past, but have never previously been convicted of wrongdoing.

“This pattern of prosecutions suggests an arbitrary use of the legal system as an instrument of harassment and intimidation in order to punish them for their work advocating for victims of alleged human rights violations,” the UN experts said.

“States must ensure lawyers are not subject to prosecution for any professional action, and that lawyers are not identified with their clients.”

The statement’s signatories included the special rapporteurs on human rights defenders, the independence of judges, freedom of opinion, freedom of association and on protecting rights while countering terrorism.

UN special rapporteurs are independent experts mandated by the UN Human Rights Council to report their findings. They do not speak in the name of the United Nations itself.

The UN experts have put their concerns to Islamabad.