UN rights chief calls for international inquiry into Kashmir violations
Decades of rights violations on both sides of the Line of Control in Kashmir have âclaimed or ruined numerous livesâ and should be the subject of a high-level international probe, the UNâs human rights chief said on Thursday.
Flagging the launch of the first UN human rights report on the disputed territory separating India and Pakistan, Zeid Raâad Al Hussein noted his intention to ask the Human Rights Council in Geneva to set up a commission of inquiry at its next session, beginning on Monday.
The High Commissioner â whose mandate ends this summer – highlighted what he called the âchronic impunity for violations committed by security forcesâ and said that the political nature of the conflict had masked the âuntold sufferingâ of millions of people.
The main focus of the 49-page report is the use of reported âexcessive forceâ by soldiers in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, although it also examines a range of rights violations in Pakistan-Administered Kashmir.
In Indian-Administered Kashmir, the report details how large demonstrations erupted in Jammu and Kashmir two years ago after Indian security forces killed the leader of an armed group.
It notes how âexcessive forceâ led to the deaths of an estimated 145 civilians from mid-2016 to April this year.
Victimsâ lack of access to justice remains a key challenge in Jammu and Kashmir, the report from the UN human rights office, OHCHR, continues.
It details how bespoke legislation gives security personnel âvirtual immunityâ against legal redress unless the Indian government authorizes it, and says that âthere has not been a single prosecutionâ in the nearly 30 years that the Armed Forces (Jammu and Kashmir) Special Powers Act has been in force.
This âalmost total impunityâ has also hindered inquiries into enforced or voluntary disappearances, the report continues, citing allegations of mass graves in the state and the alleged mass rape of 23 women by soldiers in Kunan-Poshpora nearly three decades ago.
Turning to Pakistan-Administered Kashmir, the OHCHR report describes rights violations there as being âof a different calibre or magnitudeâ.
It details restrictions on freedom of expression and peopleâs right to peaceful assembly in two territories â Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) and in Gilgit-Baltistan – and expresses concern at the âvery broad definition of terrorismâ amid reports that hundreds of people have been detained under Pakistanâs anti-terrorism legislation in Gilgit-Baltistan alone.
Any resolution of the political situation in Pakistan-administered Kashmir and Indian-administered Kashmir âmust entail a commitment to end the cycles of violence and ensure accountability for past and current abuses by all partiesâ, Zeid said.
Lead Image Courtesy:Â Nimisha Jaiswal/IRIN

