Rights concerns mount in PoJK as activist appeals to British Government
London, June 9
UK-based Kashmiri author, political analyst and human rights advocate Shabir Choudhry has written to British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, urging the UK government to take a more active role in addressing what he described as a deteriorating human rights situation in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan.
In a letter addressed to the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, Choudhry expressed concern over reports of increased security deployments, alleged use of force against demonstrators, arrests of political activists, restrictions on freedom of expression, communication blackouts and limitations on independent media access in PoJK.
According to the letter, more than 20,000 security personnel, including Rangers, Frontier Constabulary and police units, have reportedly been deployed in the region.
Choudhry alleged that the resulting crackdown has led to casualties, injuries and detentions, while communication restrictions have made independent verification of events increasingly difficult.
The letter also highlighted concerns regarding Gilgit-Baltistan, where residents have reportedly raised issues related to political marginalisation, inadequate constitutional protections, restrictions on democratic participation, control over natural resources, demographic changes and land ownership disputes.
Choudhry argued that the United Kingdom bears a historical and moral responsibility towards the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir due to its role during the 1947 transfer of power.
He called on the British government to support efforts aimed at safeguarding human rights, democratic freedoms and peaceful conflict resolution in the region.
The human rights advocate urged London to closely monitor developments in PoJK and Gilgit-Baltistan, raise concerns with Pakistan regarding allegations of excessive force and arbitrary arrests, encourage independent international human rights monitoring, and support democratic reforms, transparency and accountability.
He also called for greater engagement with civil society groups and human rights defenders from the two regions and stressed the need for transparent monitoring of humanitarian and development assistance to ensure that aid reaches local communities.
"Many residents believe that aid allocated in their name does not always reach those for whom it is intended," Choudhry stated, advocating independent oversight of assistance programmes.
Emphasising the aspirations of the local population, Choudhry said the people of PoJK and Gilgit-Baltistan seek dignity, justice, democratic representation, economic opportunity and respect for fundamental human rights.
— ANI
Reader Comments
This is exactly why Kashmir issue needs resolution - not just in Indian Kashmir but across the border. Imagine 20,000 security personnel deployed against your own people mere kilometres away from Indian territory. Shabir Choudhry has done well to bring this to international attention.
While I support the cause, I'm skeptical about British intervention. The UK hasn't exactly been a neutral party in our region's history. Let's not forget they partitioned us. Better for India to take leadership and demand UN-mandated plebiscite implementation. 😤
Heartbreaking to read about Gilgit-Baltistan too. Demographics changing through government policies, land grabs... exactly what Kashmiris on both sides have feared for decades. The least we can do as Indians is amplify these voices. Dignity for all Kashmiris, regardless of which side of LoC they live on. 🙏
Interesting perspective from someone living in the UK. But I wonder if the British government will actually act or just file this letter away. History shows they're good at making promises over Kashmir but not delivering. Let's see if Yvette Cooper responds meaningfully.
Important point about aid not reaching intended beneficiaries. This is a systematic issue in many conflict zones. Independent oversight of humanitarian assistance is a minimal demand - yet it reveals how deep the distrust runs among local populations. PoJK residents know who their true representatives should be.
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