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JAMMU KASHMIR PEOPLES LEAGUE ESTABLISHED IN 3RD OCT. 1974, A CONSTITUENT OF THE ALL PARTIES HURRIYAT CONFERENCE, AN ALLIANCE OF KASHMIRI PRO-FREEDOM GROUPS AT THE FOREFRONT OF THE POLITICAL STRUGGLE AGAINST INDIAN RULE IN INDIAN ADMINISTERED KASHMIR

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Seminar on Right to Self Determination.. APHC

All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC) has organized a seminar at its head office Srinagar today urges UN to press India for plebiscite in Kashmir. Speakers at a seminar maintained that the unparalleled sacrifices of the Kashmiris to secure this inalienable right would not be allowed to go waste. Speakers included Hurriyat Chairman, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Mukhtar Ahmed Waza, Nayeem Ahmed Khan, Muhammad Abdullah Tari, and Dr Javed Iqbal. A resolution passed on the occasion said that the Kashmiris were the masters of their destiny and they would continue their struggle that was totally indigenous.

The APHC Chairman, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, while addressing a seminar stressed the establishment of another such international institution, having the capability to address the long pending international conflicts including the Kashmir dispute.

He said that India had not been able to suppress the ongoing Kashmir liberation movement through use of brute force and other methods and it should take positive and sincere steps for settlement of the Kashmir dispute. He said that the people of Kashmir had rendered matchless sacrifices for securing their right to self-determination and their struggle would not go waste.

Mukhtar Ahmad Waza while addressing a seminar has urged the United Nations to play its role in resolving the Kashmir dispute in accordance with the Kashmiris’ aspirations.

Waza said that the UN had passed its first resolution on Kashmir on January 5, 1949, which promised to give the people of Jammu and Kashmir their inalienable right to self-determination. He deplored that despite the passage of several decades, the world body had failed to implement its resolutions.

The senior APHC leader maintained that Kashmir was not a border dispute between India and Pakistan or any other administrative or economic conflict but a political problem and must be resolved politically. “The dispute is pending due to the rigid and unrealistic approach of the India,” he added.

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