Resolving Kashmir issue requires goodwill of India, Pak: UN

United Nations: Resolving the Kashmir issue between India and Pakistan will require goodwill of the member states, a top United Nations counter-terrorism official said.

“We need also a goodwill of member states. How can we resolve that without the goodwill of member states,” UN Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate Executive Director Jean-Paul Laborde said here in response to a question on the Kashmir issue between India and Pakistan and the problem of terrorism in the region due to the conflict.

“In preventive diplomacy and resolution of conflict, the role of the UN is to put people together and to continue to speak. Hopefully we will one day finish and resolve this conflict and hopefully we will have reduction of acts of terrorism,” he said at a press briefing yesterday.

On the issue of terrorism, he said that with more than 30,000 foreign terrorist fighters from some 100 countries around the world, terrorism is a global threat requiring a comprehensive and unified response.

“There is no doubt that the threat from terrorism remains persistent and, unfortunately, credible, as demonstrated in many places,” Laborde said.

“A country cannot, and is not in the position, to fight this phenomenon alone,” he added.

Ahead of a Security Council briefing on stemming the flow of foreign terrorist fighters, Laborde highlighted that while the territorial expansion and military force of the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS/Daesh) was reduced in recent months, the groups capacities have been changing into those of a “real terrorist organisation.”

This year the group was able to “commit or indirectly inspire” at least 393 attacks in 16 countries during the month of Ramadan, from June to July, the majority of which occurred in Iraq and Syria, he said.

The Executive Director said the world was not “becoming a safer place anytime soon because of this flexibility.”

“The first action is really to reduce to zero the territory of Daesh. This means that the so-called caliphate cannot anymore be a hope for anybody,” Laborde said.

The Executive Director also stressed the importance of cooperation in international counter-terrorism efforts, including with civil society and the private sector.

In that regard, he noted that police forces should have improved intelligence through better relationships with communities, which could motivate people to speak to authorities when suspicious activities occur.

“We will not ? as the universal community as a whole ? we will not be in the position to counter terrorism effectively without the support of not only the governments but the society. This is a society which is a base for revolt against the terrible acts against the victims, against civilians. Thats where perhaps also we have to be more vocal in terms of the UN,” he said.

 

 

–PTI