India rejects UN chief’s Kashmir mediation offer

The Indian government has rejected the latest offer by UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres to mediate between India and Pakistan on the Kashmir issue, saying that it would only discuss the matter bilaterally, reports The Hindu.

Speaking in Islamabad at the beginning of a four-day visit to Pakistan, Guterres had said he had offered his offices and was ‘ready to help if both countries agree for mediation.’

In a response late on Sunday evening, the ministry of external affairs official spokesperson said, ‘The issue of Jammu and Kashmir that needs to be addressed is that of vacation of the territories illegally and forcibly occupied by Pakistan. Further issues, if any, would be discussed bilaterally. There is no role or scope for third party mediation.’

The spokesperson added that India hopes the UN secretary-general would ‘emphasise on the imperative for Pakistan to take credible, sustained and irreversible action to put an end to cross-border terrorism against India.’

The UN secretary-general has offered several times to mediate on the issue, and had repeated the offer last September after India-Pakistan tensions flared over the government’s decision to amend Article 370 and impose restrictions in Jammu and Kashmir.

While the government’s rejection of the offer is also routine, it may also be meant as a reminder to US president Donald Trump, who has made several offers of mediation in the past, and will arrive in India in a week’s time.

News Courtesy: www.newagebd.net