US urges respect for rights after India's Kashmir move

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India, Kashmir, Article 370
An Indian Paramilitary trooper stands guard in Srinagar. AP

Washington - The US state department said it is "closely following" events in Kashmir.

By AFP

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Published: Tue 6 Aug 2019, 7:42 AM

Last updated: Tue 6 Aug 2019, 3:49 PM

Washington on Monday urged respect for rights and called for the maintenance of peace along the de facto border in Kashmir after India stripped a special autonomy status from the region.
"We are concerned about reports of detentions and urge respect for individual rights and discussion with those in affected communities," State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said in a statement.
Just ahead of the Indian announcement, senior former and current Kashmiri political leaders said that they had been put under house arrest.

"We call on all parties to maintain peace and stability along the Line of Control" that divides the Pakistani and Indian sectors of the disputed territory, Ortagus said.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's BJP party rushed through a presidential decree to scrap from the constitution special status for Kashmir.

It also moved a bill proposing the Indian-administered part of Kashmir be divided into two regions directly ruled by New Delhi.

Ortagus said the US is "closely following" events in Jammu and Kashmir state, but noted that India has described its actions as "strictly an internal matter."

US President Donald Trump last month claimed, during a meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, that Modi had asked Trump to help mediate the Kashmir dispute.

While Pakistan has often sought third-party mediation in the decades-old disagreement which has cost tens of thousands of lives, the idea is anathema to India, which has always insisted the issue can only be resolved bilaterally.


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