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           |  | Jammu and Kashmir:
 An Internationally 
	Recognized Disputed Territory
 
 By Ghulam Nabi Fai
 
 Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 28, 2012   Jammu and Kashmir is an internationally recognized disputed territory 
	and has never been an integral part of India, a veteran Kashmiri leader 
	said.
 “I want to debunk this myth created by India that Kashmir 
	is an integral part of India ---- this is a matter of historical record that 
	India occupied the region on October 27, 1947 when the very first Indian 
	soldier set foot on the soil of Kashmir ---- the highest diplomatic forums 
	including the United Nations and the United States have recognized the 
	disputed nature of the region,” Dr. Ghulam Nabi Fai told a forum of 
	journalists in Springfield, Virginia.
 
 The Kashmiri-American activist 
	said in the post-9/11 world, New Delhi has tried to weave a smokescreen with 
	some unfounded myths, which seek to discredit the genuine struggle of the 
	people. But these ploys will never be able to cover up the reality and 
	sufferings of people in the Occupied Kashmir, he added.
 
 “India has 
	failingly tried to equate Kashmiri people with terrorists --- how can a 
	people, who believe in the UN-mandated right to self-determination and then 
	hold demonstrations to go to the UN office in Srinagar to remind the 
	international community of its pledge, be terrorists? Terrorists don’t 
	believe in the UN system or any other global forum.
 
 “Also, how can 
	an entire population of millions be dubbed as terrorists when they hold 
	peaceful demonstrations for their promised rights?” he questioned.
 
 Dr. Fai also said that India would like you to believe that Kashmir is an 
	issue of fundamentalism. He explained that “the term fundamentalism is quite 
	inapplicable to the Kashmiri society. One of the proud distinctions of 
	Kashmir has been the sustained tradition of tolerance and amity between the 
	members of different religious communities.  It has a long tradition of 
	moderation and non-violence.  Its culture does not generate extremism or 
	fundamentalism. The fact is that Kashmir conflict was never a fight between 
	Hindus and Muslims.  It was never a struggle between theocracy and 
	secularism.  Nor was it a border dispute between India and Pakistan.  It has 
	always been about the hopes and future of 17 million people of Kashmir, be 
	they Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs or Buddhists.”
 
 Fai, who next month 
	begins a two-year period of incarceration, told journalists that his 
	sentencing pertains to tax-related issues and not as an agent of a foreign 
	government.
 
 “The U.S. government voluntarily withdrew allegations 
	against me that I was an agent of a foreign government,” he clarified.
 
 Fai regretted that despite the US government’s voluntarily dropping the 
	allegations against him, some parts of the media misleadingly tried to give 
	the impression that the sentencing was on account of his being an agent of a 
	foreign government. He said that he pleaded guilty to two counts of 
	conspiracy and tax violations.
 
 Fai emphasized, “I have never worked 
	for Pakistan. I am not an agent of Pakistan. I dedicated all my effort to 
	the Kashmir cause and for the peace in the region”.  Even the federal court 
	judge, Fai explained, who sentenced me called Kashmir a wonderful cause and 
	said: “I don't doubt your love for Kashmir and its people, and I do not 
	doubt that your mission over the last 25 years has been a mission to bring 
	peace to Kashmir and to try and identify a means to peace between India and 
	Pakistan and Kashmir. You are to be heartily commended for those efforts. 
	But your zealousness overwhelmed your good judgment.”
 
 Dr. Fai quoted 
	his attorney, Ms. Nina Ginsberg who said in the court, “And I will tell you 
	that Dr. Fai absolutely, from the very outset, adamantly denied that he was 
	ever, in Mr. Kromberg's terms, a shill for the Pakistani government. And 
	this case would have gone to trial had the Government not agreed, for 
	whatever the reasons are-- My reasons, my view of their reasons is they 
	couldn't prove it. They have a lot of words that were captured in 
	intercepts, 20 years of intercepts, hundreds of thousands of interprets, and 
	Mr. Kromberg cannot stand in front of this Court with one example of a 
	statement, a public statement by Dr. Fai, a writing by Dr. Fai, a position 
	taken at a conference that he sponsored, not one, not one word that is 
	anything that could be characterized as propaganda for the Pakistani 
	government.”
 
 Fai said he would continue with his bid to draw world 
	attention to the need to give the Kashmiris their long-denied right to 
	self-determination. The Kashmiri-American community and all those who 
	believe in universal human rights and human dignity will continue to project 
	the Kashmir cause in Washington, he said.
 
 In this respect, he 
	referred to a series of planned conferences and advocacy moves that would 
	highlight to the U.S. administration the need to address the longstanding 
	Kashmir dispute in accordance with will and aspirations of the people of 
	Jammu and Kashmir.
 
 
 
 
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