Pak PM Imran calls for UN action on India dispute

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Al Jazeera News :
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan has called for the United Nations to help mediate between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan over the disputed territory of Kashmir.
“This is a potential flashpoint,” Khan said on Wednesday during a media briefing at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, adding that it was time for the “international institutions … specifically set up to stop this” to “come into action”.
The Indian government in August revoked the constitutional autonomy of
Indian-administered Kashmir, splitting the Muslim-majority region into two federal territories in a bid to integrate it fully with the rest of the country.
Kashmir is claimed in full by both India and Pakistan. The two countries have gone to war twice over it, and both rule parts of it. India’s portion has been plagued by separatist violence since the late 1980s. This is not the first time Khan has sought international intervention.
“This is just a reiteration of his old position. He had said this in his earlier meeting with President Trump on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly [in September] as well,” Zahid Hussain, an Islamabad-based security analyst and journalist, said.
“It seems that since all the doors to talks with India are closed, that is one of the reasons why Pakistan is appealing to the international community to intervene,” he told Al Jazeera.
Khan said his biggest fear was how New Delhi would respond to the continuing protests in India over a citizenship law that many feel targets Muslims.
“We’re not close to a conflict right now … What if the protests get worse in India, and to distract attention from that, what if …”
Although, he said, the two nuclear-armed neighbours were not close to an all-out war, the international community, including the UN, “must act” to avert tensions between the two sides from hitting “a point of no return”.
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