UN Has Responsibility to Implement its Resolutions on Kashmir: Pakistan’s Deputy PM Dar

Pakistan calls for upholding multilateralism, emphasises UNSC implementation of Kashmir, Palestine resolutions

Wed Feb 19 2025
icon-facebook icon-twitter icon-whatsapp

Key points

  • China convenes UNSC meeting
  • The very fabric of world order in danger: Dar
  • China calls for peaceful resolution of global conflicts

UNITED NATIONS: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar has said the United Nations (UN) has a responsibility to implement its resolutions on Kashmir.

Dar spoke to representatives of various countries during a high-level meeting of the UN Security Council, convened by China on multilateralism and global governance.

“The Jammu and Kashmir dispute is another open wound and an ever-present threat to international peace and security,” Dar said.

He pointed out that for almost eight decades, Kashmiris have confronted brutal foreign occupation and been denied their right to self-determination, as prescribed by multiple UN Security Council resolutions.

The Jammu and Kashmir dispute is another open wound and an ever-present threat to international peace and security.” – Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar

The Security Council, he said, has an enduring responsibility to ensure the implementation of its own resolutions.

“Pakistan will continue to work for a peaceful resolution of the Jammu and Kashmir dispute, in accordance with the UN Charter and relevant Security Council resolutions.”

Multilateralism

He called for reaffirming the commitment to multilateralism, warning that the very fabric of the world order established under the UN Charter was in “danger of being torn apart” unless timely corrective steps were taken.

“We are meeting today at a time of profound global turbulence,” Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar said.

In his remarks, he highlighted the unresolved conflicts in Palestine and Jammu & Kashmir that threaten world peace and stability and underscored the need for the 15-member Council, the world body’s power centre, to implement its own resolutions.

“Mass killings of civilians”

“Nowhere is our failure to uphold the Charter and its principles more evident than in the ongoing tragedy in Palestine – in the vicious military aggression in Gaza, the mass killings of civilians, mostly women and children, in the systematic violations of fundamental human rights, international law, and international humanitarian law,” he told top officials from around the world.

The January 15 ceasefire agreement between Hamas and Israel, Senator Dar said, offers a glimmer of hope, and that all its stages should be fully implemented, leading to a permanent ceasefire and an inclusive political process towards a two-state solution.

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi s presided over the Security Council’s meeting as China holds its rotating presidency for the month of February.

“Under the visionary leadership of President Xi Jinping, China is working actively to address the “multipronged mixed crisis” the world faces today,” Senator Dar said.

“We – the UN’s Member States – are all in the same boat. We must help each other avoid the threat of a global war, the use of nuclear weapons, the issues of poverty, the existential threat of climate change.”

The Council’s deliberations come at a time of growing concerns about multilateralism, with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres warning that the international community was failing to respond to crises, which is damaging multilateralism.

icon-facebook icon-twitter icon-whatsapp