Joe Biden unlikely to mediate in Kashmir dispute, Azad Kashmir president says

Sardar Masood Khan, President of Azad Jammu and Kashmir, speaks during an interview with Agence France-Presse at Pakistan's embassy in Washington, DC on September 30, 2019. (AFP)
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Updated 08 December 2020
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Joe Biden unlikely to mediate in Kashmir dispute, Azad Kashmir president says

  • Might engage US President-elect to ‘end repression’ in disputed territory, Masood Khan says
  • Cites experience of working with President Donald Trump as not ‘very reassuring’

ISLAMABAD: Azad Jammu and Kashmir President Sardar Masood Khan on Monday said that it was “not likely” for US President-elect Joe Biden and his administration to mediate in the Kashmir dispute.
“At the moment not likely [for the US] to mediate, but we would continue to engage the United States for playing [a] constructive role to end repression in Kashmir,” President Khan told Arab News.
He added that the issue was brought up for discussion three times at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), recently.
“Since the US is an important player, our expectations from the US is that it should not block any other meeting there. [Instead], it should demonstrate leadership and help the security council to address the issue of Kashmir,” Khan said.

 

 

Citing his experience of working with President Donald Trump’s administration which was “not very reassuring,” Khan said that Trump had said, “he would mediate on Kashmir, but nothing happened.” 
“The moment he uttered those words, they were contradicted by India’s External Affairs Ministry...”
“He [Trump] gave the impression that [Indian Prime Minister Narendra] Modi had prompted him to do so, but Mr.Modi and his representatives said that he had not made any such offer or suggestion. So there is past experience also,” Khan said.
In a statement on Saturday, Khan said that Washington could play a pivotal role in resolving the issue between India and Pakistan as it was “an influential member” of the UNSC.
“[The] Trump administration, with the help of Pakistan, had made good headway on the issue of Afghanistan and President Trump attempted to act as a mediator to resolve the Kashmir issue between India and Pakistan as well,” the statement said.
“But, later, he [Trump] backtracked and adhered to maintaining an artificial balance between the two countries, and then the mediation offer came to naught,” it added.
Khan said that at least 700,000 Pakistanis live in the US who have “a key role to play in influencing the decision making directly or indirectly.”
Rejecting bilateral talks with India, Khan said that resolving the Kashmir conflict depended on multilateral diplomacy.
“The solution to the issue was given to Kashmiris by the UN Security Council seven decades ago to determine their will...regarding their future through a plebiscite,” he said.
Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan have twice gone to war over Kashmir since gaining independence from Britain in 1947.
Delhi and Islamabad both claim Kashmir in full, but control only parts of it — territories recognized internationally as “Indian-administered Kashmir” and “Pakistan-administered Kashmir.”


Pakistan police, security forces kill 12 militants in separate operations

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Pakistan police, security forces kill 12 militants in separate operations

  • The operations were conducted in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Karak, Balochistan’s Kalat districts
  • The country is currently battling twin insurgencies in both provinces that border Afghanistan

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s police and security forces have gunned down 12 militants in separate operations in two western provinces that border Afghanistan, authorities said on Sunday.

Police launched an operation in a mountainous area of Karak district in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, following reports of militant presence, according to Karak police spokesman Shaukat Khan.

The operation resulted in the killing of at least eight militants, while several others were wounded in the exchange of fire with law enforcers. Karak police chief Saud Khan led the heavy police contingent alongside personnel from intelligence agencies.

“Several militant hideouts located in the mountainous terrain between Kohat and Karak districts were dismantled during the operation,” Khan told Arab News on Sunday evening, adding the operation was still ongoing.

Separately, security forces killed four “Indian-sponsored” separatist militants in an intelligence-based operation in Kalat district of the southwestern Balochistan province, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing.

“Weapons, ammunition and explosives were also recovered from the terrorists, who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area,” the ISPR said in a statement.

“Sanitization operations are being conducted to eliminate any other Indian sponsored terrorist found in the area.”

Pakistan, which has been facing a surge in militancy, has long accused Afghanistan of allowing its soil and India of backing militant groups, including the TTP, for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi have consistently denied this.