October 13 , 2016

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No peace in region without Kashmir solution: Pakistan

* Envoy says South Asia’s security environment is blighted by India’s insistence on hegemonic policies, engaging in arms buildup and refusal to engage in dialogue

UNITED NATIONS: A senior Pakistani diplomat has underscored the need for resolving the decades-old Kashmir dispute between Pakistan and India in a bid to promote peace and stability in South Asia.

“South Asia’s security environment is blighted by one power’s insistence on hegemonic policies, engaging in a relentless arms build-up, and a myopic refusal to engage in any meaningful dialogue on security issues,” Ambassador Tehmina Janjua, who is Pakistan’s permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva, told the General Assembly’s First Committee, which deals with disarmament and international security matters.

She said that in 1974, Pakistan’s security was challenged when India detonated a nuclear weapon. Left with no option, Pakistan had to follow suit to restore strategic stability in the region and deter all forms of aggression, she said. At the same time, Ambassador Janjua said Pakistan made a number of proposals for keeping South Asia free of nuclear weapons and missiles, such as the simultaneous application of the IAEA safeguards on all nuclear facilities and bilateral arrangement for their reciprocal inspections.

Other proposals included simultaneous accession to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), a regional test ban treaty, zero missile regime in South Asia and the signing of a non-aggression pact.

“None of these proposals met a favourable response,” she said. Referring to last month’s address of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to the UN General Assembly in which he expressed Pakistan’s readiness to agree to a bilateral arrangement with India on a nuclear test ban, Ambassador Janjua said, “We are awaiting a response to that proposal.”

“Peace and stability in South Asia cannot be achieved without resolving underlying disputes, especially the Jammu and Kashmir dispute, agreeing on measures for nuclear and missile restraint, and instituting conventional forces balance,” she told delegates. “Our proposal for a strategic restraint regime, based on these three inter-locking elements, remains on the table. We have demonstrated our commitment to peace and stability in the region.”

“Our conduct continues to be defined by restraint and responsibility, and avoidance of an arms race.”

Discussing disarmament measures at the international level, Janjua said that while progress on nuclear disarmament remained deadlocked, the pursuit of selective non-proliferation measures persisted.

She said that after failing to develop consensus on an equitable and non-discriminatory fissile material cut-off treaty in the Conference on Disarmament (CD), attempts continued to be made to move the issue outside the conference. Pakistan, she said, would not accept recommendations by the ill-advised Group of Governmental Experts (GGE) on the treaty, and substantive work on that matter must be undertaken in the conference.

“Through a series of actions in diverse areas, we have demonstrated our credentials and eligibility to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG),” Ambassador Janjua said. “We expect that a non-discriminatory, criteria-based approach is followed for expanding NSG membership, which would strengthen the non-proliferation regime in an equitable and credible manner.”

The Pakistani envoy called for addressing regional security issues through dialogue and diplomacy, including establishing a strategic restraint regime in South Asia.

She said that safe, secured and peaceful use of nuclear energy, without discrimination, was essential for economic development, adding that Pakistan met the international standards to gain full access to civil nuclear technology for meeting its growing energy needs for continued economic growth.

Siddharth Nath, an Indian delegate, exercising the right of reply, said it was a matter of record that Pakistan was responsible for blocking progress in the Conference on Disarmament.

Pakistan’s delegate Yasar Ammar, exercising the right of reply, questioned why India had not responded to his government’s proposals for a bilateral nuclear test ban arrangement between the two countries. He said India had joined the ‘Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on Their Destruction’ as a chemical weapon possessor state, and had conducted a second nuclear test in 1998 after “concluding the Test-Ban Treaty”. “India was also continuously enhancing its offensive abilities, including the introduction of nuclear submarines. Those actions had compelled Pakistan to take appropriate measures to deter all forms of aggression.”

 

Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk

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