Kashmiri diaspora on martyrs day vow to continue struggle

International community reminded of its obligation to ensure Kashmiris' right to self-determination.

WASHINGTON: Kashmiri-Americans and their supporters across the United States observed Martyrs Day vowing to carry forward their struggle for their United Nations-promised right of self-determination and liberation from India’s yoke.

The day marks the killing of 22 Kashmiris by troops of the then Dogra ruler Maharaja Hari Singh. The deadly shooting occurred on July 13, 1931, in front of the Srinagar jail.

Since that day, Kashmiris have organized peaceful protests, seminars, and conferences throughout the world to renew their resolve to win freedom to pay homage to those martyrs as well as to those more than 100,000 innocent men, women and children brutally killed by Indian occupation forces since that fateful day.

Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai, Secretary General of the World Kashmir Awareness Forum, made an imperative appeal for the world powers to recognize the long-standing wishes and aspirations of the Kashmiri people for freedom.

“The people of Kashmir will never forget the selfless contribution and the tireless efforts of these martyrs.

Their efforts will remain forever a milestone in the history of the freedom struggle of Kashmir,” Fai reiterated.

Dr. Fai stressed that the people of Kashmir have little faith in or respect for the so-called Indian democracy, recalling a last year’s New York Times Op-Ed which said, ‘Modi’s India Is Where Global Democracy Dies.’

And on August 5, 2019, Huffington Post wrote, ‘As Kashmir Is Erased, Indian Democracy Dies In Silence.’

“The desire for self-determination is the one very big ‘element’ India should be concerned about yet continues to pretend to the world that it does not exist,” Fai said, adding that such tactics will not subdue the decades-old movement against its rule in Kashmir.

Nevertheless, he said, the people of Kashmir have sent a loud and clear message to the world community that the Kashmir issue is not about governance or economic packages, or financial incentives as proclaimed by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, when he abrogated Article 370 & 35 A on August 5, 2019.

“They want the world to know that the youth of Kashmir are dying on the streets, not asking for jobs and roads, but asking the people’s right — the right to self-determination.”

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