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China, Pakistan slam India's move to change Kashmir's special status

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China slams India for making Ladakh union territory; India calls it comment on internal affairs



Beijing, Aug 6

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Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunyin

China has slammed India for according Ladakh the status of Union Territory following the decision to deny special status to Jammu and Kashmir.

Asked to comment on reports that India had announced establishment of “Ladakh central territory,” which covers territory of the western section of the Sino-Indian border, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chuying on Tuesday said: “China has always opposed the Indian side’s entry of the Chinese territory in the western section of the Sino-Indian border into the administrative jurisdiction of India.”

She added: “This position is firm and consistent and has never changed. Recently, the Indian side has continued to damage China’s territorial sovereignty by unilaterally modifying the form of domestic law. This practice is unacceptable and will not have any effect.”

The Chinese Foreign Ministry urged India “to be cautious on the border issue, strictly abide by the relevant agreements reached between the two sides, and avoid taking actions that further complicate the border issue.”

Chuying added that India and Pakistan, which both claim the Himalayan region in its entirety, should practice restraint and avoid taking unilateral action to “change the status quo and escalate tensions.”

India, on the other hand, has slammed China for commenting on internal affairs of India. “The J&K Reorganization Bill 2019 which proposes the formation of a new “UT of Ladakh” is an internal matter concerning the territory of India. India does not comment on the internal affairs of other countries and similarly expects other countries to do likewise,” Spokesperson at the Indian Ministry of External Affairs Raveesh Kumar said.

Indian lower house of Parliament on Tuesday ratified a bill presented by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist-led government to revoke a longstanding constitutional provision that made Kashmir exempt from some Indian laws and gave its residents hereditary rights to land, educational scholarships and public sector jobs within the region.

An indefinite security clampdown continued in the Kashmir Valley, where about 7 million people were blocked from cellphone, internet and landline networks.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan, meanwhile, has asked the world community to take notice of Indian moves to change the status of disputed Kashmir, saying Islamabad and New Delhi could go to war if India repeats a military strike inside his country.

Khan said he fears that Kashmiri people, angered over India’s decision to strip the region of its special status, could launch an attack on Indian security forces and that New Delhi could blame Pakistan for it. Kashmir is split between India and Pakistan and is claimed by both.

Khan made his remarks Tuesday in a speech to parliament.

In February, a bomb attack in Indian-controlled Kashmir killed 40 Indian troops. India responded with an airstrike inside Pakistan, blaming a Pakistani group for the attack.

Pakistan retaliated and said it shot down two Indian air force planes.

 
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SRINAGAR, India/ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan to change the status of Kashmir ran into fierce opposition from China and its ally Pakistan on Tuesday as the disputed territory lay under a telecoms blackout to forestall protests for a second day.


Indian policemen stand guard in a deserted street during restrictions in Jammu August 6, 2019. REUTERS/Mukesh Gupta
In a move to tighten its grip on Jammu and Kashmir, parts of which are claimed by Pakistan and China, India dropped a constitutional provision that allowed the country’s only Muslim-majority state to make its own laws.

The changes imposed by Modi’s Hindu nationalist-led government are the most sweeping in the nearly 30 years that India has been battling a revolt in Kashmir. The government also broke up the state into two federally administered territories.

China said it opposed India’s decision to revoke Kashmir’s special status and that New Delhi needed to be cautious on border issues.

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“India’s action is unacceptable and would not have any legal effect,” Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said in a statement, drawing an immediate rebuke from Delhi that Kashmir was an internal affair.

The Himalayan region is divided between India, which rules the populous Kashmir Valley and the Hindu-dominated region around Jammu city, Pakistan, which controls a wedge of territory in the west, and China, which holds a thinly populated high-altitude area in the north.

China urged India to strictly abide by the agreements reached by both countries in order to avoid any actions that would further complicate boundary issues, Hua said. India and China have a longstanding dispute over the border including in Ladakh, the high altitude area.

Indian foreign ministry spokesman Raveesh Kumar said splitting Jammu and Kashmir into federal territories was a domestic issue.


“India does not comment on the internal affairs of other countries and similarly expects other countries to do likewise.”

Thousands of paramilitary troops have been deployed in Kashmir and phone and internet services have been suspended, prompting criticism the government is trying to stifle all dissent.

Video images by Reuters partner ANI showed deserted streets on Tuesday in Srinagar, the main city of the region at the heart of the decades-long armed revolt which India accuses Pakistan of helping. Islamabad says it gives only moral and diplomatic support to the Kashmiri people in their struggle for self-determination.

After a meeting with top commanders in the city of Rawalpindi, Pakistan’s army chief expressed support for the people of Kashmir, and the prime minister said he was weighing an approach to the United Nations Security Council.

“The Pakistan Army firmly stands by the Kashmiris in their just struggle to the very end,” said General Qamar Javed Bajwa. “We are prepared and shall go to any extent to fulfil our obligations in this regard.”


The nuclear-armed neighbors have fought two of their three wars over the territory, and engaged in an aerial clash in February after a militant group based in Pakistan claimed responsibility for an attack on an Indian military convoy.

“We will fight it (Modi’s policy) at every forum. We’re thinking how we can take it to International Court (of Justice) ... to the United Nations Security Council,” Prime Minister Imran Khan told Pakistan’s parliament.

HINDERED DEVELOPMENT
The Indian government has said Kashmir’s special status hindered its development because it barred people from outside the state from buying property, investing and settling there.

“We will make Jammu and Kashmir into one of our most developed states,” Home Minister Amit Shah told parliament to loud cheers from supporters.


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Armed police on Tuesday patrolled every few hundred meters in Srinagar, where a ban on public gatherings of more than four people stayed in force. Educational institutions and most shops in residential neighborhoods were shut.

Some shopkeepers said stocks were running out after days of panic-buying.

“No provisions are left in my shop, and no fresh supplies are coming,” said grocery store owner Jehangir Ahmad.

At a Srinagar hospital hit by the crackdown on telephone, television and internet communications, staff were working overtime, with ambulances sent to bring in doctors and nurses.

“We are managing for now,” said a senior official at the 500-bed Lal Ded hospital who sought anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to media.


In Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-governed Kashmir about 45 km (28 miles) from the neighbors’ contested border, protests entered a second day, with hundreds of people, including children, shouting anti-India slogans.

Many Kashmiris have relatives on both sides of the border, but those on the Pakistani side say they have been unable to reach people in India for days.

Tanveer-ul-Islam, who migrated to Muzaffarabad in 1990, said he had lost touch with his mother in Indian Kashmir since Sunday.

“You can’t even imagine my pain,” he added. “We do not know about the well-being of anyone across the divide.”
 
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