Home Latest News P.M. Khan Leads Nationwide Protests for Kashmir

P.M. Khan Leads Nationwide Protests for Kashmir

by AFP

File photo of Prime Minister Imran Khan. Aamir Qureshi—AFP

‘We will stand with Kashmir until our last breath,’ says Imran Khan, as he reiterates condemnation of India’s Modi

Thousands rallied across Pakistan on Friday in mass demonstrations protesting Delhi’s actions in India-held Kashmir in the most ambitious public protests targeting India in years.

At noon, sirens rang out across the country followed by broadcasts of the national anthems of Pakistan and Kashmir, while traffic ground to a halt for several minutes in solidarity with the rallies.

In the capital Islamabad, thousands gathered on Constitution Avenue in front of the government offices where Prime Minister Imran Khan addressed the nation and vowed to continue fighting for Kashmir until the disputed Himalayan territory was “liberated.”

“We will stand with Kashmir until our last breath,” said Khan, while launching into a blistering attack on Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and comparing his administration to the Third Reich in Nazi Germany.

Thousands more also rallied in the cities of Lahore and Karachi, with large crowds waving flags and screaming pro-Kashmiri chants. “No matter what India does, no matter what Modi does, Kashmir is ours. It belongs to us and we will not sit by as our Kashmiri brothers are oppressed by the Indians,” said Sadaf Mirza, a 24-year-old university student in Lahore.

The demonstration was the first in what will be weekly rallies held nationwide until Khan leaves for New York next month to attend the United Nations General Assembly, where he vowed to raise the Kashmir issue.

Tensions have soared between the neighboring nations in the wake of Modi’s move to strip India’s portion of Kashmir of its autonomy and bring it under Delhi’s direct rule. The area is currently in its fourth week of a wide-ranging communications blackout with severe restrictions on movement. Thousands of people have been incarcerated in the crackdown, sources have told AFP.

In the weeks since the move, Khan has launched a wide-ranging diplomatic offensive to counter Delhi, while vowing to fight India “until the end” if attacked and making occasional references to the possible outbreak of nuclear conflict.

Friday’s protests came as The New York Times published an editorial written by Khan, where the former cricketer warned of rising hostilities between the countries. “World War II happened because of appeasement at Munich. A similar threat looms over the world again, but this time under the nuclear shadow,” wrote Khan.

Kashmir has been divided between the two countries since independence, and has been the spark for two major wars and countless clashes between the archrivals. In February, the rivals again came close to all-out war, after a militant attack in Indian-held Kashmir, perpetrated by a local separatist but claimed by a group based in Pakistan, ignited tit-for-tat airstrikes—the first between nuclear-armed nations.

The protests in Pakistan came a day after its military announced the testing of a surface-to-surface ballistic missile, with the Army’s spokesman saying the weapon was “capable of delivering multiple types of warheads.”

Related Articles

Leave a Comment