NEW YORK: Pakistan’s new Permanent Representative to the United Nations (UN) Munir Akram on Friday met UN General Assembly President Tijjani Muhammad-Bande and apprised him regarding the deteriorated situation of the Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir.
Munir Akram urged that the international community must play its role to resolve the Kashmir dispute as it can become a flashpoint between two nuclear-armed states.
Pakistan’s permanent representative to the United Nations, Munir Akram has impressed upon the United Nations General Assembly President that international community must play its role to resolve the Kashmir dispute as it can become a flash point between two nuclear-armed states. pic.twitter.com/ZcE7vqZKdj
— Information Ministry (@MoIB_Official) November 15, 2019
During the meeting, Akram said that the situation in held Kashmir, which has been under a repressive military lockdown for over four months is now further worsening.
Indian military lockdown in Kashmir entered 103rd day on Friday. Restrictions under Section 144 remain enforced and residents continue to suffer immensely due to suspension of the internet across all platforms, cellular services, according to Kashmir Media Service.
Akram apprised Muhammad-Bande that despite the lapse of one hundred days of India’s inhuman curfew and blanket restrictions on all forms of communications as well as systematic intimidation, normalcy has still not returned and fear grips the disputed state.
He also discussed in the meeting regarding Sustainable Development Goals with a focus on the goal of zero hunger aimed at ending hunger, achieving food security, improving nutrition and promoting sustainable agriculture as well as measures to curb illicit financial flows.