Islamabad
Speakers at a live webinar while highlighting dangerous dimensions of the lingering Kashmir conflict have observed that the ever-present threat of a nuclear war between India and Pakistan will continue to hover on the horizon unless both countries address the core issue that happens to be the root cause of tension in the region.
The webinar convened by Kashmir Institute of International Relations (KIIR) in collaboration with World Muslim Congress on the sidelines of the 44th session of United Nations Human Rights Council titled “Emerging Conflict in South Asia Threat to International peace and security” was addressed by noted British author, biographer and historian Victoria Schofield, Ambassador (r) Arif Kamal, Ershad Mahmud, Brig (r) Dr. Saif Malik, Ahmed Qureshi and others. It was moderated by the KIIR Executive Director Sardar Amjad Yousaf Khan. Referring to the genesis of Kashmir issue, the speakers pointed out that Kashmir, which has now assumed a dangerous dimension, had been a subject of dispute between India and Pakistan since the partition of the Indian subcontinent in 1947.
Terming Kashmir conflict as the root cause of tension in the region they said that the long drawn conflict, which has consumed Kashmiris’ three generations, has been a stumbling block in the way of peace, prosperity and stability in the region.
“It is because of the unresolved Kashmir conflict that the two countries have never been able to be on good terms since 1947”, they said adding that the conflict has triggered two of the three major Indo-Pak wars in 1947 and 1965, and a limited war in 1999.
The violent face-off in Ladakh between India and Chinese military, they said, has added a new dimension to the Kashmir conflict.
“There is a wall of misunderstanding between the two countries”, they added.
The Indian government’s 5th August move they said has further endangered the security situation in the region.—KMS