India and Pakistan to resolve Kashmir issue to bring peace.
MP Andrew Stephenson asked Pakistan to improve its judicial system and ensure that rule of law and democracy prevails in the country. He said the law and order breakdown in the country and the harassment of visiting British Pakistanis by the police was discouraging both the foreign visitors and investors from visiting Pakistan.
Senge Sering talked about extending CBMs on Kashmir to Gilgit-Baltistan. He requested both India and Pakistan to open LOC for trade between Ladakh and Gilgit-Baltistan. He said that more than 10,000 Ladakhis living in Gilgit-Baltistan demand resumption of travel to Ladakh on humanitarian basis.
Travel between Ladakh and Gilgit-Baltistan will help revive secular culture and help counter terrorism and communalism in the region, he said. Jammu Kashmir Commission for Human Rights Secretary General Dr Syed Nazir Gilani said that the title of the people of Kashmir to self-determination as equal people has been endorsed not only by India and Pakistan but all member nations of the UN stand committed to it.
Kashmiris living in all the three administrations of Kashmir and the Diaspora should pool their efforts in the realisation of this right. He expressed his deep anguish on the death of a generation in Kashmir and regarded it as the death of self-determination.
Mumtaz Khan talked about empowering local people of Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan and redefining relationship between Kashmir and Pakistan to ensure long term peace in the region. He said that AJK issues are overshadowed by the narratives suitable to the dominate political parties. He alleged that militants were very much responsible for human rights violations in Kashmir.
Ali Adalat urged Pakistan to drop its inclusive religion-focussed policy on Kashmir. He condemned demographic change and rising sectarian violence in Gilgit-Baltistan and called for the protection of vulnerable religious minorities in the region.
Krishna Bhan talked about the plight of Kashmiri Pandits and called them victims of communalism. She said that Pandit refugees have been living in camps outside Kashmir Valley since 1989 after militants engineered their “exodus and genocide”.