انٹر نیشنل ہیومن رائٹس کورٹ اور کشمیر میں عدالتِ انصاف(آئی پی ٹی کے) نامی این جی او کی جانب سے شائع کردہ رپورٹ کے مطابق قابض بھارتی فوج کے انسانیت سوز مظالم میں بتدریج اضافہ ہو رہا ہے، مقبوضہ کشمیر میں شمال میں 55دیہات میں کھدائی کے دوران2ہزار 700اجتماعی قبروں کا انکشاف ہواہے۔
ادھر اقوام متحدہ کے سیکریٹری جنرل انتونیو گوتریس نے مقبوضہ کشمیر کی صورتحال پر شدید تشویش کا اظہار کرتے ہوئے کہا ہے کہ مسئلہ کشمیر کے حل کے لیے پاکستان اور بھارت مذاکرات کریں۔
ترجمان اقوام متحدہ کے مطابق گوتریس نے کہا کہ مقبوضہ کشمیر میں کرفیو کو 60روز گزر گئے ہیں اور مقبوضہ وادی میں اسی لاکھ لوگ قید ہیں، جبکہ مقبوضہ کشمیر پر اقوام متحدہ کا موقف تبدیل نہیں ہوا۔
علاوہ ازیں امریکا کے شہر لاس اینجلس میں امریکی مسلمان شہریوں کی جانب سے مقبوضہ کشمیر میں انسانی حقوق کی خلاف ورزیوں پر ریلی اور مظاہرے بھی کیے گئے۔
بھارت میں بھی جواہر لال نہرو یونیورسٹی کے طلبا نے دفعہ 370کی منسوخی کے خلاف احتجاج کیاجس میں بھارتی وزیر جتندرا سنگھ بھی شریک تھے، اس دوران بائیں بازو کی تنظیموں کے طلبا کے گروپوں اور ہندو انتہا پسند تنظیم آر ایس ایس سے وابستہ اکھیل بھارتیہ ودیارتھیہ پریشدکے درمیان شدید تلخ کلامی بھی ہوئی، طلبا نے یونیورسٹی کنونشن سینٹر کے باہر احتجاجی مظاہرہ کیا اور ’’کشمیر ہے کشمیریوں کا ،ہندوستان کی جاگیرنہیں‘‘جیسے نعرے بلند کیے ۔
معروف جریدے دی اکنامسٹ‘‘نے رپورٹ میں لکھا ہے کہ بی جے پی کی حکومت نے وادی کو ایک بڑی جیل میں تبدیل کردیا ہے۔ ایک رپورٹ کے مطابق مقبوضہ کشمیر کی بندش سے بھارتی ریلوے کو دوکروڑسے زائد کا نقصان ہوا اور کرفیو اور پابندیوں کے باعث مقبوضہ وادی میں نظام زندگی مفلوج ہے۔
AP Oct 4, 2019 :The lockdown and communications blackout in occupied Kashmir entered its 61st day on Friday. Frustration, anger and fear have been growing in occupied Kashmir since August 5, when the Hindu nationalist-led government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stripped the region of its semi-autonomous status and imposed a curfew and a communications blackout.
By Niha Masih, Joanna Slater andShams Irfan Oct. 1, 2019PARIGAM,: It was near midnight when the soldiers came for Yassin Bhat. The 25-year-old pulled on some clothes and stepped into the darkness. Nearby, on the main road, he saw dozens of Indian army soldiers, Bhat said. One asked him what he thought about India’s move the day before to revoke Kashmir’s autonomy. Terrified, Bhat replied that it was a good step. The officer told him not to lie, Bhat recalled, and ordered him to take off his clothes in the middle of the road.
Then, he said, the abuse began. Several soldiers held him down while others used thick cables to whip his back and legs. The soldiers then placed on his chest and genitals electrical wires connected to a battery. He remembers being immobilized as the current surged through his body.
مقبوضہ کشمےر مےں لاک ڈاﺅن سے غےر ےقےنی صورتحال کے دوران دورہ کرنے والی بھارتی خواتےن تنظےموں کی رہنماﺅں وانسانی حقوق کے لیے کام کرنے والی بھارت کی سول سوسائٹی اور انسانی حقو ق کے تعلق پانچ خواتین نے مسلم اکثرےتی وادی کشمےر کی سنگےن صورتحال کے بارے مےں حقائق پر مبنی اےک تفصےلی رپورٹ جاری کرتے ہوئے کشمیر کی صورت حال پر تشویش کا اظہارکیا ۔
Srinagar, September 25, 2019: Normal life remained affectedfor the 52nd consecutive day on Wednesday with public transport off the roads while Mobile and internet servives ontinued to be snapped in the occupied Kashmir Valley since 5 August.
New Delhi, September 25, 2019: Leaders of Indian women’s organisations National Federation of Indian Women’s (NFIW)who visited occupied Kashmir earlier this month released a fact-finding report, detailing appalling conditions in the Muslim-majority valley. The five women leaders — including Dr Syeda Hameed of the Muslim Women’s Forum, Pragatisheel Mahila Samiti's Poonam Kaushik, and Annie Raja, Kawaljeet Kaur, and Pankhuri Zaheer from the National Federation of Indian Women's (NFIW) — visited occupied Kashmir from September 17-21, 2019.
Speaking at the Delhi Press Club, the five brave women shared their experiences and observations with the media and concerned citizens after visiting Kashmir under lockdown for the past 51 days. “When we reached there, it was like walking into a cloud of depression,” Dr Syeda Hameed and Annie Raja explained, terming their findings an eyewitness account. “By many verified accounts, we are talking about almost 13,000 young people having disappeared in the past 51 days,” they said, noting that they visited Srinagar and several villages in the districts of Shopian, Pulwama, and Bandipora.The report details the grief of one of the many people the women spoke to and notes that the Indian Army “pounces on young boys; it seems they hate their very sight. When fathers go to rescue their children they are made to deposit money, anywhere between 20,000 to 60,000.”
Washington, September 17, 2019 : The Amnesty International has vowed that it would not be silenced on raising concerns about the situation in occupied Kashmir despite facing intimidation by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi´s government.Amnesty International Secretary-General, Kumi Naidoo, in a media interview in Washington said that the Modi government has made a very big attempt to crush Amnesty in India, stressing, “On the Kashmir question, on various human rights questions in India itself, we are not intimidated”.
Srinagar, September 17,2019:The Indian soldiers came after midnight, Abid Khan says, his hands trembling, one of around two dozen young men in just one part of Kashmir who say they have been tortured by the Indian army. Sajjad Hyder Khan, a local official in Pinjoora village, told media that he had seen a list of 1,800 people detained by police and troops from Shopian alone. The residents say the troops are committing such inhuman acts with an aim to create a climate of fear in the territory. Screams of people are often heard from Indian army camps at night, as troops pick up youth from Shopian villages and torture them at their camps ‘to make them an example for other villagers’.
September 17, 2019 (New York) : The Human Rights Watch has urged Indian authorities to release immediately Kashmiris detainees as India is making a mockery of its human rights commitments by denying Kashmiris a voice in their future, jailing political leaders, and suspending basic freedoms. Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch said “India is making a mockery of its human rights commitments by denying Kashmiris a voice in their future, jailing political leaders, and suspending basic freedoms,” Ganguly said. “The government’s heavy-handed measures are only making a bad situation worse.”
Srinagar, September 17 ,2019: The curfew like restrictions and communications blackout across Indian occupied Kashmir entered 44th day on Tuesday, as shops and businesses in the region remain closed since August 5.The mobile telephone services and the internet, including broadband services, continued to remain suspended since August 5.
Due to the ongoing military clampdown, the people of the Kashmir valley were facing acute shortage of basic essentials, including food, milk and life-saving drugs.