Kashmir: Concerned US lawmakers seek immediate end to communication blackout

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Washington: Two US lawmakers have expressed concerns over the human rights situation in Kashmir, and urged Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to press India to immediately end the communication blockade and release those who have been detained.

In a letter to Pompeo dated September 11, Pramila Jayapal, the first and the only Indian-American Congresswoman in the House of Representatives, and Congressman James P McGovern said the international media and independent human rights observers must immediately be allowed into Jammu and Kashmir to investigate reports of abuse.

“We urge you to work across the Administration to press the Indian Government to immediately end its communications blackout of Kashmir, expedite the process of reviewing and releasing individuals ‘preventatively’ detained, ensure hospitals have access to life-saving medicines and protect the rights of the Kashmiri people to freedom of assembly and worship,” reads the letter.

The two lawmakers told Pompeo that they have significant concerns about the humanitarian and human rights “crisis” in Kashmir.

“In particular, we are concerned about credible reports from journalists and advocates on the ground that the Indian government has detained thousands of people with no recourse, imposed defacto curfews and cut off internet and telephone access on the region,” they said.

Restrictions were imposed when New Delhi had August 5 scrapped the state’s special status under Article 370 of the Constitution and bifurcated in into Union territories — Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh.

“We also urged the Indian Government at its highest levels to make it clear that religious tolerance — long a principle of Indian history and democracy — must be upheld,” the two lawmakers wrote in the letter.

Tagging the letter in a tweet, Jayapal said: “I continue to be deeply concerned about credible reports of a humanitarian crisis in Jammu & Kashmir. Even in complex situations, we look to strong democratic allies like India to uphold basic human rights and due process.”

Meanwhile, a top American lawmaker has urged his Congressional colleagues to attend Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s public address in Houston later this month, according to a media report.

‘As a co-Chair [of the Congressional Caucus on India and Indian-Americans], I hope that you will participate in welcoming Prime Minister Modi to Houston,” Congressman Brad Sherman said, as reported by the Daily Beast Wednesday.

In a letter dated August 23, Sherman said the mega event at the NRG Stadium in Houston would be attended by 50,000 people and broadcast to more than 300 million people.

It will include a segment honouring the great work of human rights leaders Mahatma Gandhi and Dr Martin Luther King Jr, Sherman said in his letter.

The mega event, billed as “Howdy Modi”, has attracted great enthusiastic participation from Indian-American community. Organisers have closed the registration, once it crossed 50,000.

From Houston, Modi will fly to New York to attend the annual session of the United Nations General Assembly.

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