Prime Minister Imran Khan will give a policy statement regarding the situation in Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir during his upcoming visit to Azad Kashmir on Friday, the Foreign Office said on Thursday.
“The policy statement is part of Pakistan’s continued struggle for the Kashmir cause,” Foreign Office spokesperson Dr Muhammad Faisal said at a weekly media briefing.
He said several other steps were also under consideration regarding the IoK and would be shared as the situation unfolds. The spokesperson said the struggle for Kashmir was a continued process, not an event.
“Our stance is loud and clear that the all issues with India including the Kashmir dispute can be resolved through dialogue,” he added.
About the composition of 58 countries that joined Pakistan’s call at the Human Rights Council, he said these mostly included members of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and other states that condemned India’s illegal occupation of Kashmir and the continued communications lockdown of the valley.
The spokesperson termed as “speculative” the media reports quoting the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates after their joint visit to Pakistan as saying that the Kashmir issue should not be linked with the Muslim Ummah.
“Instead, the visit of the two foreign ministers affirmed Saudi Arabia and the UAE’s solidarity with Pakistan and also support for the Kashmir cause,” he said.
He said India’s negative response was delaying the solution of the issue, which was creating a humanitarian crisis in occupied Kashmir.