۹ فروردین ۱۴۰۳ |۱۸ رمضان ۱۴۴۵ | Mar 28, 2024
News ID: 358754
10 August 2019 - 18:00
Activist asks Muslim world to come forward for Kashmir

"The people of Kashmir want the Muslim world to come forward and play their role to get this core issue resolved," Fatima Anwar said on Twitter in an open letter to Turkish President.

Hawzah News Agency (Kashmir,  India) - A Kashmiri activist and sportswoman has called on Turkey and the Muslim world to play an active role in resolving the current crisis in Jammu and Kashmir.

"The people of Kashmir want the Muslim world to come forward and play their role to get this core issue resolved," Fatima Anwar said on Twitter in an open letter to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

"We want to use our right of self-determination, and most importantly, we need our basic right to live."

"We will never allow India to make Jammu and Kashmir another Palestine," Anwar said.

"We ask [President] Erdogan to mobilize the UN and the Organization for Islamic Cooperation to enable us to decide on our own destiny," she told Anadolu Agency on Friday.

Underlining that Jammu and Kashmir has been a disputed territory since 1947, she recalled that on Aug. 5, the Indian government revoked Article 370 of the Indian Constitution without the approval of Kashmiris, which had been "protecting the identity of the state".

Describing it as "illegal", Anwar said the move would never be accepted by the Kashmiri people.

"India imposed a curfew. Mobile phone and internet services are restricted, and about one million armed forces have been deployed here,” Anwar said.

More than 100,000 people lost their lives, thousands of women became widows and many other people disappeared, she added.

"The worst happens every day over here," she stressed.

-Rising tensions

Tensions between Islamabad and New Delhi have escalated following India's move to revoke the special status of Jammu and Kashmir, which allowed Kashmiri citizens to enact their own laws and prevented outsiders from settling in and owning land in the territory.

Kashmiri leaders and residents fear this step is an attempt by the Indian government to change the demography of the Muslim-majority state, where some groups have been fighting against Indian rule for independence or for unification with neighboring Pakistan.

Pakistan has also downgraded diplomatic relations with India, suspended trade and expelled the Indian High Commissioner.

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