ISLAMABAD: As the PPP’s Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) chapter on Sunday urged the region’s election commission to withdraw the election schedule for 12 refugee seats in the Legislative Assembly, Information Minister Ataullah Tarar called for a resolution to differences through democratic and constitutional means.
Ahead of the July 27 elections in AJK, the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) had called for widespread protests demanding the abolition of 12 seats in the region’s Legislative Assembly reserved for refugees from Indian-occupied Jammu and Kashmir who settled in mainland Pakistan after 1947.
Elections for these seats are held separately from the 33 general seats in AJK, with refugees registered in 12 constituencies across Pakistan voting for their representatives. The seats have long been politically sensitive due to disputes over voter lists, delimitation, and constitutional amendments.
Information Minister Tarar while addressing the media outside Parliament House stressed that elections are the best way to achieve the public mandate in a democracy.
“Azad Jammu and Kashmir is at the top of Pakistan’s priorities. Public welfare measures will continue in AJK,” he said.
“The federation is committed to solving public problems and to the development of AJK,” he said, adding that the government had allocated significant financial resources in the upcoming budget for public facilities in AJK, including electricity.
“Decisions on matters of national interest and public welfare should be prioritised above politics,” he stated.
“Everyone has the right to protest but taking the law into one’s own hands cannot be allowed,” he stressed. “No opinion can be imposed by force, peaceful protest is the right of every citizen. Differences should be resolved through dialogue.”
‘Elections difficult under current circumstances’
PPP-AJK President Chaudhry Muhammad Yasin, who addressed a press conference at Kashmir House earlier today following a meeting of the party’s core committee, called upon the AJK election commission to withdraw the polling schedule for the 12 refugee seats.
Yasin maintained that issuing the election timetable just three days before JAAC’s June 9 protest call was “not an appropriate decision”.
During negotiations, all parties had adopted a positive attitude, and JAAC was asked for a one-week extension, which was not granted, he said.
“Under the current circumstances, holding elections appears difficult. The Election Commission should withdraw the schedule and move the consultative process forward. PPP is not in favour of any confrontation or clash. 12 refugee seats cannot be more valuable than human lives,” he said.
He stressed the need for dialogue to defuse the ongoing crisis, adding that dealing with existing challenges and tensions in the region, negotiations and political consensus were unavoidable.
“The central focus of PPP’s politics has always been the Kashmir issue. Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Shaheed Mohtarma Benazir Bhutto played a historic role in highlighting the Kashmir cause at the global level,” he said.
He noted that over the last seven months, the government had made serious efforts to resolve public issues and strengthen democratic institutions, recalling the implementation of “37 out of 38” demands of the JAAC from an agreement the group signed with the government last year in October.
“Only the constitutional matter relating to refugee seats remained under consideration, for which alternative legal and constitutional avenues exist,” he noted.
“There is a shortage of essential commodities in AJK. The state is facing serious difficulties and uncertainty. The solution to all problems lies in dialogue, political harmony and continuity of the democratic process,” he stressed. Warning of external exploitation, he said hostile forces, particularly India, could try to take advantage of the situation.
Yasin was accompanied by Parliamentary Leader in the AJK Legislative Assembly Sardar Muhammad Yaqoob Khan, Senior Minister Mian Abdul Wahid, and ministers Sardar Javed Ayub, Javed Iqbal Budhanvi, Sardar Ziaul Qamar, Chaudhry Qasim Majeed, Chaudhry Yasir Sultan, Mahrukh Taqdees Gillani, and PM’s spokesperson Shaukat Javed Mir, among others.
‘Pave the way for reconciliation’
The PPP parliamentary leader, Khan, echoed similar demands while speaking on the occasion, saying it was “imperative” that the schedule be withdrawn.
“Elections are not more important than human lives. Hasty and ill-advised decisions have brought us to this point. PPP believes in democratic values and supports consideration of the public’s peaceful demands. It is imperative to withdraw the election schedule immediately to pave the way for reconciliation,” he said.
Senior Minister Wahid said saving the state was the top priority. “AJK cannot afford more tension and conflict. All parties must urgently seek an acceptable solution through dialogue,” he said.
“Pakistan and Kashmir cannot be separated. Kashmiris’ love and attachment to Pakistan remains as strong as ever, and India can never succeed in creating a rift between Pakistan and the Kashmiri people. Despite political differences, state interests must come first,” Wahid said.
He stressed that there was still time for all parties to sit together, resolve the issue and postpone elections in view of the current situation.
Earlier in the day, PPP Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari also said that the PPP had called upon the AJK Election Commission to withdraw its “premature election schedule”.
Tarar calls for end to differences over AJKLA refugee seats via democratic means
ISLAMABAD: As the PPP’s Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) chapter on Sunday urged the region’s election commission to withdraw the election schedule for 12 refugee seats in the Legislative Assembly, Information Minister Ataullah Tarar called for a resolution to differences through democratic and constitutional means. Ahead of the July 27 elections in AJK, the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) had cal
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