MIRPUR (AJK), Feb 13 (APP):Ambassador, Masood Khan, former President, Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) has said that Kashmir’s right to self-determination was firmly anchored in international law, moral legitimacy, and historical justice, and Pakistan would continue to advocate the cause with full conviction and strategic restraint.
Addressing a gathering of nearly 300 students and faculty members at the National University of Computer and Emerging Sciences (FAST) in the federal metropolis , he congratulated the university leadership for building one of Pakistan’s leading academic institutions and underscored the pivotal role of youth in shaping Pakistan’s future.
Referring to United Nations Development Programme statistics, he noted that nearly 64 percent of Pakistan’s population was under the age of 30, making the youth not only the majority but also the principal decision-makers of tomorrow.
Speaking on the theme “Kashmir in International Law and Pakistan’s Strategic Narrative,” Ambassador Khan stated that the Kashmir freedom movement predates 1947 and had historical roots extending over two centuries.
He traced the origins of Kashmiri resistance to oppressive regimes beginning in the mid-eighteenth century and elaborated on successive phases of political repression, economic exploitation, and denial of fundamental rights faced by the people of Jammu and Kashmir.
Ambassador Khan emphasized that the people of Jammu and Kashmir possessed an inherent and inalienable right to self-determination, rooted in both modern international law and universal principles of justice.
He explained that the Indian Independence Act of 1947 provided princely states with the legal basis to determine their future based on geographical contiguity and demographic composition, both of which supported Jammu and Kashmir’s natural alignment with Pakistan.
Highlighting the legal dimension, Ambassador Khan noted that multiple United Nations Security Council resolutions reaffirmed the Kashmiri people’s right to determine their political future through a free and impartial plebiscite.
He described this right as a peremptory norm of international law that could not be overridden unilaterally.
Ambassador Khan underscored that Pakistan’s constitutional and diplomatic stance consistently prioritized the will of the Kashmiri people before determining any future political arrangement.
He added that Pakistan’s strategic narrative was based on international legality, moral consistency, and advocacy for human rights, including opposition to demographic and political changes imposed in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir after August 5, 2019.
Reaffirming Pakistan’s commitment to peace, Ambassador Khan said that Pakistan remained a nuclear state committed to strategic restraint and peaceful resolution of disputes through dialogue and diplomacy. He warned that failure to resolve the Kashmir dispute posed serious regional and global security risks, including the possibility of catastrophic conflict between two nuclear-armed states.
Ambassador Khan also called upon universities and academic institutions to play an active role in shaping informed national narratives. He urged students to study international law, critically examine competing narratives, and advocate the Kashmiri cause with intellectual clarity and confidence.
He emphasized that the Kashmir issue was not merely a territorial dispute but fundamentally a struggle for human dignity, justice, and the democratic right of self-determination.