PoJK, PoGB Humanitarian Crisis Deepens Amid Crackdowns and Neglect

A report details a severe humanitarian crisis in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, marked by inflation, unemployment, and essential service failures. Protests have erupted over electricity shortages and unaffordable tariffs, despite the regions hosting major hydropower projects that feed Pakistan's national grid. The situation is compounded by allegations of land grabs, displacement without compensation, and a security response involving arrests, communication blackouts, and force. Activists have raised these systematic suppressions and grievances at international forums like the UN Human Rights Council.

Key Points: Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir Crisis: Protests, Neglect, Crackdowns

  • Protests over power bills & shortages
  • Land grabs & displacement claims
  • Resource exploitation for Pakistan's grid
  • Crackdowns, arrests & blackouts
  • International rights concerns raised
3 min read

Humanitarian crisis deepens in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir amid crackdowns, systematic neglect

Report highlights humanitarian crisis in PoJK & PoGB: power shortages, land grabs, protests met with arrests and communication blackouts.

"These protests were not confined to food prices. Electricity shortages and inflated power bills have become a year-round ordeal. - Asian Lite report"

London, March 20

The deprivation of essential services in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir and Pakistan-occupied Gilgit-Baltistan has forged a widening humanitarian divide, where inflation, unemployment, food insecurity, and power shortages intertwine with political exclusion and security-driven administration, a report has highlighted.

According to a recent report in the UK-based newspaper 'Asian Lite', the increasing involvement of women and students in demonstrations highlights the societal discontent, signalling a persistent crisis rooted in structural neglect.

As unrest grows and crackdowns escalate, the worsening humanitarian crisis in PoJK and PoGB exposes Pakistan's administrative policies in the territories it controls without constitutional integration.

"These protests were not confined to food prices. Electricity shortages and inflated power bills have become a year-round ordeal. Despite hosting major hydropower projects, residents endure prolonged load-shedding while being charged commercial tariffs. The contradiction has become emblematic of the wider crisis - regions rich in natural resources but denied their benefits," the report detailed.

"In PoJK, similar protests escalated into region-wide shutdowns. Demonstrators refused to pay electricity bills, citing unaffordable rates, unpaid salaries, and the erosion of basic civil liberties. The response from authorities has often involved arrests, communication blackouts, and the use of force," it added.

The report noted that in PoGB, land ownership has become a critical flashpoint with large tracts of land labelled as state property, denying communities legal rights to their ancestral lands.

"Allegations of land grabs linked to infrastructure and strategic projects have intensified resentment, particularly where locals claim displacement without compensation. Resource exploitation has followed a similar pattern," it added.

Additionally, the electricity generated from the hydropower project in PoJK and PoGB feeds Pakistan's national grid, while local communities struggle with power shortages and soaring tariffs.

"The perception that regional resources are extracted for external benefit has deepened mistrust toward federal authorities," the report noted.

Highlighting the repression in these Pakistan-occupied territories, it said, critics argue that Pakistani security agencies, especially the Inter-Services Intelligence, prioritise controlling dissent rather than resolving grievances.

"Allegations of surveillance, intimidation, and enforced disappearances have surfaced repeatedly in reports by rights groups," the report highlighted.

While the crisis has begun to attract international attention, though sporadically, in 2025, activists from PoJK and PoGB at a side event during the UN Human Rights Council session in Geneva, expressed grave concerns over restrictions on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.

"Speakers described systematic suppression and the absence of legal protections for millions living in the disputed territories. Despite such interventions, Pakistan's official response has largely focused on denial. Authorities have frequently attributed protests to 'external influence', a narrative that sidesteps the documented economic and humanitarian grievances raised by residents themselves," the report mentioned.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who follows human rights issues, the pattern is clear. Denial of land rights, resource extraction without local benefit, and silencing dissent through force – it's a textbook case of oppressive administration. The UNHRC side event is a crucial step. The world needs to listen.
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Priyanka N
It's the same old story. Blame "external influences" instead of addressing the real issues of inflation, unemployment, and no electricity. My heart goes out to the women and students leading the protests. Their courage is immense. Hope they get justice soon.
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Rahul R
While the report highlights Pakistan's failures, we in India must also reflect. Are we doing enough to raise this issue on global platforms? Our diplomacy needs to be more proactive in highlighting the plight of our brothers and sisters in PoK and Gilgit-Baltistan.
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Aman W
The land grab issue is particularly cruel. Taking away ancestral land without compensation? That's inhuman. Pakistan talks about Kashmir but has done nothing for the people living in the part it controls. Shameful.
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Kiran H
Respectfully, while the situation is bad, we must be careful with our rhetoric. The solution isn't just blaming Pakistan but finding a humane resolution for the people suffering. Endless conflict helps no one. The focus should be on relief and dialogue.
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