Geneva: In a diplomatic victory for India, Pakistan on Thursday failed to garner the required support at the 42nd UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) session to place a resolution on Kashmir within the stipulated deadline of 1pm (local time).
Reliable sources told media that most member states refused to support Islamabad for placing a resolution on Kashmir.
Though Pakistan had made desperate attempts to garner the required support, the neighbour also failed to get the support of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) countries consisting of 57 member states.
New Delhi's diplomatic efforts appeared to have clearly paid off by persuading the international community on its ability to manage the affairs of Jammu and Kashmir as an 'internal matter' of the country.
India has sent a high-level delegation to UNHRC, consisting of 47 countries, led by Ajay Bisaria, former India's ambassador to Pakistan, to counter Islamabad on Kashmir.
Last week, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan had claimed that 58 countries had joined his country in the Human Rights Council 'reinforcing' the demand of the international community on India to lift the restrictions and 'protect Kashmiris' rights'.
On September 12 at the UNHRC meeting in Geneva, New Delhi firmly rejected Islamabd's allegations, saying a 'fabricated narrative' on Jammu and Kashmir has come from 'the epicentre of global terrorism' and from a nation, which conducts cross-border terrorism as a form of 'alternate diplomacy'.
The clash occurred after Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi claimed earlier in the day that India had transformed Jammu and Kashmir into a largest 'caged prison on this planet' by abrogating Article 370 and that human rights were being 'trampled with impunity' there.
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