Srinagar (Jammu and Kashmir): Holding the G20 summit in Jammu and Kashmir would be an adventurous and ambitious step as well as an opportunity to recognize J-K at the highest level, according to a report in JK Policy Institute. The Srinagar-based independent, think-tank said that despite resistance from Pakistan and China, India announced Srinagar as the venue for the G20 Tourism Working Group meeting scheduled to take place from May 22 to 24.
It's for the first time in the past 70 years that J-K would be hosting an international event like G-20, and the occasion offers Jammu and Kashmir a chance to rise to the occasion of exhibiting its market prospects, ecotourism ventures, and cultural assets to the leading global nations, the report stated. The G-20 symposium or associated discussion groups in Srinagar would represent the most formal geopolitical devastating blow for Pakistan, which has calcified its stance on J-K following the repeal of Articles 370 and 35-A and the division of the former state into two separate Union Territories in 2019.
"G20 meetings are being organized in entire India, in all cities and parts of India. It is therefore natural to hold the meetings in Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh because these are inalienable parts of India," Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) Official Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said during the MEA weekly media briefing.
India has issued a significant strategic assertion to the international society, primarily to Beijing and Islamabad by strategizing to organize a few G20 summits in J-K. The G20 offers a chance for the administration to solidify the benefits it claims resulted from repealing Article 370, reported JK Policy Institute.
Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha declared that the summit in J-K would convey a message of tranquillity and civility to the rest of the world. "If there is no peace, then rest assured no power on earth can bring development to the place. Some people do not like this. They do not want peace here, they want violence. J-K's welfare is in this, we can progress and come closer to or overcome other nations only when there is peace here," said Sinha.
However, the Pakistani government just not objected to New Delhi's course of action, but also allegedly asked its allied countries - China, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia - to blacklist and stop showing support for the conference. China echoed Pakistan's reason to object, saying it repudiates India's intention to host the G20 leader's meeting in the union territories of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh, reported JK Policy Institute.