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The international community does have a role in diffusing tension in Kashmir and an India-Pakistan dialogue could help arrive at a solution akin to the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland, which allows a level of free exchange on both sides of the border, opined strategic experts in London over the Kashmir crisis on Thursday.

Sir Mark Lyall Grant, National Security Advisor to former British Prime Ministers Theresa May and David Cameron as well as a former Representative of the UK at the UN, lamented the "missed opportunity"of such a solution during the talks between former Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf in 2001.

"The political stars never quite aligned but a solution similar to the Northern Ireland Good Friday Agreement, with a soft border allowing locals to travel freely from one part of Kashmir to the other, will have to be the outcome of any peaceful solution," he noted.

During a panel discussion entitled 'The Cost to Britain of the Kashmir Crisis: Is There a Solution?', organised by strategic advisory group CTD Advisors at Chatham House in London, Indian, Pakistani and British experts had a lively exchange against the backdrop of India's revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir under Article 370 of the Constitution.

"Nobody wants to see a further escalation in the region. We are on the cusp and brink of a much bigger crisis and the international community must stop being a fire brigade and intervene to find a peaceful solution," said Maleeha Lodhi, most recently Pakistan's Representative to the United Nations and also former high commissioner to theUK and ambassador to the US.

While the diplomat was vehement that Pakistan stands readyto resume a bilateral dialogue with India, the issue of ISI-backed cross-borderterrorism was constantly raised during the course of the discussion as an impediment to talks.

"What Prime Minister Modi has done [by revoking Article 370 is outrageous and preposterous and seems not to have a strategy, but the reason Pakistan has far less traction on this issue internationally is precisely because of the role of the ISI and its sponsorship of state-funded terrorism," said Jack Straw, a former UK foreign secretary who has seen the situation up close in the aftermath of the terrorist attack on the Indian Parliament in 2001.

Hitting hard at Pakistan, leading television journalist fromIndia Nidhi Razdan said the country had orchestrated years of insurgency in theregion after it failed to grab Kashmir repeatedly since 1948 and that theregion had bled as a result of that cross-border terrorism."That Pakistanis a breeding ground for terrorists is acknowledged by none other than itsPrime Minister, Imran Khan, who candidly said during a visit to the UnitedStates in July this year that there were 40 different militant groups operating within Pakistan. Therefore, serious concerns remain in India concerning terrorgroups operating from Pakistan," she said.

On the internal dynamics in Jammu and Kashmir, Razdan wascritical of the "unprecedented" communications curbs in the regionsince the revocation of Article 370 in August and expressed hope that Indiawould live up to its own values as a democracy.

She said: "The Indian government maintains that endingthe special status is all for the good of the people and for the development ofthe region. It's ironic that the people in whose name this has been done werenot consulted at all. And that political leaders who carried the Indian flagall these decades are in detention.

"All this hardly burnishes India's credentials as theworld's largest democracy."

Abdurehman Chinoy, a London-based entrepreneur, said hiscompany Chinoy Group decided to organise such a panel discussion in the UKbecause the South Asian community here is not only "dynamic andtolerant" but can also influence policy and ideas back home in India andPakistan.

Chinoy said: "We need to have dialogue to resolve thisKashmir issue, so the South Asian community continues to live in a morefriendly way outside India and Pakistan.

"My humble message to Prime Minister Modi and PrimeMinister Khan is that both leaders represent around 1.5 billion peopleglobally; while it is easy to head towards confrontation, dialogue coulddefinitely bring more stability and eventually prosperity in both countries.


Publish Time: 08 November 2019
TP News

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