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Regular-article-logo Tuesday, 26 November 2024

Approached UN, international forum as no question of talking to India, says Imran Khan

The prime minister also alleged that India tried to blacklist Pakistan in Financial Action Task Force

PTI Islamabad Published 15.09.19, 09:51 AM
Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan had said that he had tried till recently to open a dialogue with India as 'civilised neighbours' to settle differences over Kashmir through a 'political statement'.

Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan had said that he had tried till recently to open a dialogue with India as 'civilised neighbours' to settle differences over Kashmir through a 'political statement'. PTI

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has said there was no question of talking to New Delhi after it revoked the special status of Jammu and Kashmir.

'So that's why we have approached the United Nations. We are approaching every international forum that they must act right now,' he said.

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'...this is a potential disaster that would go way beyond the Indian subcontinent,' Khan said over a possibility of war with India.

The prime minister added that Pakistan would never start a war.

'I am a pacifist, I am anti-war, I believe that wars do not solve any problems,' he told Al Jazeera.

'When two nuclear-armed countries fight, and if they are fighting a conventional war, there is every possibility that it is going to end up into nuclear war. The unthinkable,' he said.

'If say Pakistan – God forbid – we are fighting a conventional war, we are losing, and if a country is stuck between the choice: either you surrender or you fight 'till death for your freedom, I know Pakistanis will fight to death for their freedom,' he said.

Tensions between India and Pakistan spiked after New Delhi abrogated provisions of Article 370 of the Constitution to withdraw Jammu and Kashmir's special status and bifurcated it into two Union Territories.

Pakistan downgraded its diplomatic relations with India and expelled the Indian high commissioner following the revocation of Article 370 in Jammu and Kashmir on August 5.

Khan claimed that Pakistan had till recently made attempts to open a dialogue with India 'to live as civilised neighbours, to resolve our difference [over Kashmir] ... through a political settlement'.

He alleged that India tried to blacklist Pakistan in Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

'If Pakistan is pushed into the blacklist of FATF, it means there will be sanctions on Pakistan. So they were trying to bankrupt us economically, so that's when we pulled back. And that's when we realised that this government is on an agenda ... to push Pakistan to disaster,' Khan said.

'There is no question of talking to the Indian government right now after they revoked this article 370 of their own constitution and they annexed Kashmir illegally against the UN Security Council resolution,' Khan said.

Asserting that abrogation of Article 370 was its internal matter, India has strongly criticised Pakistan for making 'irresponsible statements' and provocative anti-India rhetoric over issues internal to it.

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