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Africa Subsaharan
Address Boko Haram as terrorist, not Islamic sect, OIC tasks media, civil societies
2018-06-09
[NEWTELEGRAPHONLINE] The Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) has tasked the media in Nigeria and abroad to desist from addressing Boko Haram
... not to be confused with Procol Harum, Harum Scarum, possibly to be confused with Helter Skelter. The Nigerian version of al-Qaeda and the Taliban rolled together and flavored with a smigeon of distinctly Subsaharan ignorance and brutality...
snuffies as Islamic sect.

The OIC, which said this in a document, insisted that the members of the sect should rather be addressed as criminals because they "are anti- Islam."

Quoting the Secretary General of the group, Eyad Madani, the document read: "What they (Boko Haram) do is criminal act; it has absolutely nothing to do with Islam."

The IOC scribe said: "The OIC has issued statements that ... these people are outlaws. "What they do is criminal act, it has absolutely nothing to do with Islam, Islamic teachings, the religion of Islam, the history, the culture, the civilization of Islam and we should identify them for what they are: as a terrorist group." Mr. Madani had earlier said in Abuja that the OIC is solidly behind Nigeria in its fight against Death Eaters.

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International-UN-NGOs
Arab states cannot stop Israel: OIC secretary-general
2014-08-06
[DAWN] Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) Secretary-General Iyad Ameen Abdullah Madani admitted on Monday that the Arab states cannot take any practical steps to stop Israel from attacking Gazoo.

Mr Madani was speaking at an event titled 'Contemporary Challengers of the Moslem World: The Vision and Role of the OIC' at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad.

"In 1967, the Arabs faced a defeat as Israeli forces entered the Sinai Desert, West Bank of the Jordan River and the Golan Heights. Arabs cannot imagine stopping the support for Paleostinians, but practically they are not in a position to do anything," he claimed.

"OIC has been trying its best to classify the killing of Paleostinians as a 'war crime', but unfortunately the preachers of human rights
...which are usually open to widely divergent definitions...
are not only supporting Israel but are also providing political shield to it," he said.
Interesting.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
OIC's Syria decision
2012-08-18
[Dawn] BESIDES adding to the Baathist regime's regional and international isolation, the suspension of Syria's membership by the Organisation of Islamic Conference on Wednesday is unlikely to have much effect on the situation in the Levant if the aim is peace. The 57-member bloc coupled the suspension with a call for the development of a peaceful mechanism that would build "a new Syrian state based on pluralism" and a "democratic and civilian system" -- ideals that are in keeping with the spirit of the Arab Spring. However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
ignoring the plea by Pakistain, Algeria and Kazakhstan that the snuffies be also blamed for the bloodshed, the 57-member body's final statement said the "principal responsibility" for the fighting lay with the government of Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Horror of Homs...
. The statement coincided with a UN report which said there were "reasonable grounds" to believe that both government forces and the rebels had committed war crimes and "gross violations" of human rights
...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty...
, including "unlawful killing, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, sexual violence, pillaging and destruction of property".

Unless there is an agreement on a ceasefire, the Syrian conflict, which has led to 20,000 dead, could expand. Leb is already in a state of tension and fear, with reports that four Arab countries have asked their nationals to leave the country following a string of abductions of some Sunnis by a Shia group. The OIC and the Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
, which suspended Syria's membership last year, ought to have a uniform policy on dissent in Mohammedan countries. Their attitudes towards Bahrain, for instance, are in sharp contrast with their Syria policies. While in the former case the Gulf Cooperation Council sent troops to crush the uprising and save the monarchy, in the case of Libya and Syria they have pursued an active regime-change strategy. What happens if tomorrow there is a democratic stir in Arab monarchies, some of which have not given their people even a semblance of constitutional rule? The Syrian situation deserves to be addressed with all sincerity, but as Pakistain's foreign minister said at the recent Tehran moot, moves that could lead to foreign intervention need to be avoided.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Pakistan backs Syrian govt, opposes foreign intervention
2012-08-11
[Dawn] Ending months of ambiguity over the crisis in Syria, Pakistain joined the group of countries supporting the Syrian government on Thursday and warned against foreign interference and military intervention in the 17-month-old conflict.

Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar was one of the three foreign ministers who attended an international consultative meeting on the Syrian crisis hosted by Iran.

"It is our considered view that any outside intervention would further complicate an already very complex situation. It must be avoided," Ms Khar said at the conference attended by about 25 countries, most of whom were represented at ambassadorial
level.

She urged the international community to respect Syria's illusory sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity.

Besides Pakistain, representatives from Russia, China, Belarus, Mauritania, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Georgia, Turkmenistan, Benin, Sri Lanka, Ecuador, Afghanistan, Algeria, Iraq, Zim-bob-we, Oman, Venezuela, Tajikistan, India, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Nicaragua, Cuba, Sudan, Jordan, Tunisia and Paleostine attended the conference.

Western countries backing rebels had dismissed the Tehran meeting as an attempt to divert world attention from the bloody events in Syria where pro-government troops are fighting pitched battles against rebel forces in Aleppo
...For centuries, Aleppo was Greater Syria's largest city and the Ottoman Empire's third, after Constantinople and Cairo. Although relatively close to Damascus in distance, Aleppans regard Damascenes as country cousins...
and other parts of the war-torn country. The West has accused Iran of broadening support for embattled Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
The Scourge of Hama...
by holding the conference.

"Syria needs political space to find a peaceful solution and reestablish its societal equilibrium by engaging all sides. Syria must forge its own destiny in accordance with the aspirations of its people," Ms Khar said.

The strong position taken by Islamabad on Syria is likely to annoy its allies US, Turkey and Soddy Arabia
...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in their national face...
, who along with Qatar and Israel have been supporting rebels to bring down President Assad.

President Asif Ali Ten Percent Zardari
... husband of the late Benazir Bhutto, who has been singularly lacking in curiosity about who done her in ...
will be attending an extra-ordinary session of the Organisation of Islamic Conference being hosted by Saudi Arabia next week that is expected to focus on Syria.

Ms Khar warned against divisive
...politicians call things divisive when when the other side sez something they don't like. Their own statements are never divisive, they're principled...
ness within Ummah on the issue of Syria and said: "Prolonged instability in Syria would have
serious consequences for the region, Mohammedan Ummah and, in fact, for the entire world. As Syria bleeds, we must eschew the temptation of taking sides. It is time to find commonly agreed solutions to stop the bloodbath in Syria."

Pakistain had earlier abstained from vote on an anti-Syria resolution in the United Nations
...an organization which on balance has done more bad than good, with the good not done well and the bad done thoroughly...
Security Council.

The foreign minister used the Tehran meeting to remind the world that the conflict in Syria was entering a dangerous phase with Al Qaeda trying to benefit from the instability there.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Assad's isolation
2011-11-17
[Dawn] PRESIDENT Bashir al-Assad's international isolation is deepening. The UN has condemned his brutality, the European Union
...the successor to the Holy Roman Empire, only without the Hapsburgs and the nifty uniforms and the dancing...
has slapped sanctions, the Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
has suspended Syria's membership and the Organisation of Islamic Conference has come out with an unusually strong warning. The Arab League's ire is understandable. On Nov 2, Arab foreign ministers gave Damascus
...Capital of the last remaining Baathist regime in the world...
15 days to implement its plan, which asked it to end the crackdown on civilians, withdraw troops from protest hubs, release the detainees, negotiate with the opposition and allow foreign observers in. The AL also threatened to close its embassies in Damascus and to negotiate with all "currents" of the opposition. The AL decision was not unanimous, but the fact that only two members -- Yemen and Leb (besides the regime's representative) -- voted against it shows that an overwhelming majority of Arab opinion considers the Assad government guilty. The AL felt humiliated when pro-regime supporters attacked the Qatar and Saudi embassies, besides those of La Belle France and Turkey. The Arab League is meeting again today to review the situation, because there were some doubts about the utility of the Nov 2 decision. Nevertheless, given the deteriorating situation, Mr Assad's options are getting fewer and fewer.

There are desertions in the army on a larger scale, the casualty toll --3,500 deaths -- is approaching the Libyan figure, and protests have spread to outlying areas. Over the past two days alone, some 70 people have been killed in festivities between protesters and security forces. While a Libya-like foreign intervention is not feasible or desirable, both AL and OIC have given hints about what lies in store for Syria. The AL said it would have to consider seeking international protection for Syrian civilians, and OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu warned that the intransigence of the regime risked an internationalisation of the Syrian crisis. Whether Mr Assad has learnt from Col Qadaffy's
... who is now napping peacefully in the dirt...
fate we do not know. But a widening of the internal conflict, especially in a country that borders Israel, will have geopolitical ramifications, unless sense dawns on Mr Assad. As Mr Ihsanoglu said an internationalisation of the crisis would not be "in anybody's interest".
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India-Pakistan
Good news on Kashmir soon, sez Gilani
2010-10-17
LAHORE: Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani on Saturday congratulated the nation and Kashmiri people on international acceptance of demands of Pakistan on the issue and said people would hear good news soon.
He's got long arms, that's how he pats himself on the back like that ...
He said Pakistan is committed to resolving the Kashmir issue and it would not compromise on its principles regarding the Kashmir policy.

"Recognition by the international community of this long-standing demand of Pakistan for resolution of the Kashmir issue augurs well for the cause and Kashmiris will soon receive good news in this regard," he said during a meeting with AJK Prime Minister Sardar Attique Ahmed Khan who had called on Gilani.

The AJK PM briefed Gilani on his participation in high-level meetings in Brussels for resolution of the Kashmir issue. He also briefed the PM about his input at the United Nations, European Union and Organisation of Islamic Conference meeting.

Sardar Attique said adoption of the Kashmir dispute as an international issue by the European Union Parliament after 63 years was the Pakistan government's greatest achievement on the foreign affairs front.
So true. Pakistan's very greatest achievement. But then, the list is short.
He said the EU had started a hearing in its parliament for resolution of the long-standing issue.
Apparently the EU Parliament doesn't have anything to do in, you know, Europe ...
Imagine if the EU had an activist parliament, like the U.S. has had recently... Let us all be thankful for small favours.
The AJK PM said the UN, EU and OIC had included the Kashmir issue in their official businesses after adopting a common mechanism for its resolution. He told Gilani that this success was an outcome of a dedicated struggle of the present Pakistani government based on a principled stance.

Sardar Attique extended the Kashmiris' gratitude to Gilani for highlighting Indian atrocities against the Kashmiris in Indian-held Kashmir before the international community as well as providing timely assistance to them at the time if the 2005 earthquake and floods.
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Southeast Asia
Thai govt: No al-Qaeda or jihadis in the south
2010-07-28
The Thai government and its top military commanders overseeing counterinsurgency operations in its restive southern Muslim provinces have ruled out the presence of al-Qaeda or jihadi tendencies, saying the rebellion is essentially local and has no affiliations with global terrorism.

"For a terrorist group like al-Qaeda Thailand is a very small target. The rebellion in three southern Muslim provinces (Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat) is a domestic issue. Some factions outside the country tried to make it an international issue," Ambassador attached to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Isorn Pocmontri said.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has said that his government is determined to resolve the conflict in the three southern provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat through reconciliation and development. "My government is determined for establishing peace and stability in the south through justice and development," Vejjajiva said.

The Prime Minister also said the security forces involved in operations in the restive regions will be made accountable for their actions amid complaints of military high-handedness in the areas.

Thailand has managed to convince the Organisation of Islamic Conference that the southern insurgency is a domestic issue and has nothing to do with international terrorism, Pocmontri said.

"No jihadi groups, no al-Qaeda are present here. They are only perpetrators of violence," Major General Udomchai Thamsarorat, Deputy Director, Internal Security operations, 4th regional forward post, Srindhoran Camp in Yarang district of the restive Pattani province told journalists. The army officer said there was no question of 'de-radicalising' people in the region as they are not radicalised.
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Afghanistan
Afghans Karzai cancels talks with Saudi leaders
2010-02-04
[Al Arabiya Latest] Afghan President Hamid Karzai cancelled on Wednesday a meeting with the world's top Muslim body in Saudi Arabia that was aimed at pushing for dialogue to help reconciliation efforts with the Taliban.

The meeting was called off because Karzai had reservations over the agenda, a senior Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) official said, without elaborating.

An Afghan diplomat told Reuters that the meeting with the OIC, led by Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, was cancelled because the Afghan delegation wanted to visit Medina, the burial place of the Prophet Mohammad.
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Europe
Minarets as bayonets
2009-12-06
By Kanchan Gupta

Turkey’s Islamist Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was being faithful to his creed when he declared, “Mosques are our barracks, minarets our bayonets, domes our helmets, the believers our soldiers.” Sheikh Youssef al-Qaradawi, a fascist Sunni imam with a huge following among those who subscribe to the Muslim Brotherhood’s antediluvian worldview, was more to the point when he thundered at an event organised by London’s then Labour mayor Ken Livingstone, “The West may have the atom bomb, we have the human bomb.” Sheikh Qaradawi, who is of Egyptian origin, frequently exhorts Muslims not to rest till they have “conquered Christian Rome” and believes “throughout history, Allah has imposed upon the Jews people who would punish them for their corruption. The last punishment was carried out by Hitler”. Islamic schools in Britain funded by Saudi Arabia use textbooks describing Jews as “apes” and Christians as “pigs”. Theo Van Gogh, who along with writer Ayaan Hirsi Ali produced Submission, a film on the plight of Muslim women under sharia’h, was shot dead by Mohammed Bouyeri, a Dutch-Moroccan Muslim, in Amsterdam. Rallies by radical Islamists, which were once rare, are now a common feature in European capitals with banners and placards denouncing democracy as the ‘problem’ and Islam as the ‘solution’.

Such crude though accurate assertions of Islamism, coupled with the relentless jihad being waged overtly — exemplified by the London Underground bombings and the riots in Parisian suburbs — and covertly as exposed by Channel 4’s stunning investigation in its Dispatches programme titled ‘Undercover Mosque’, have now begun to raise hackles in Europe. The first signs of an incipient backlash came in the form of French President Nicolas Sarkozy demanding a ban on the burqa (the sharia’h-imposed hijab is already banned at public schools in France). Any doubts that may have lingered about Europe’s patience with Islam’s rage boys running thin have been removed by last Sunday’s referendum in Switzerland where people have voted overwhelmingly to ban the construction of minarets which are no longer seen to be representing faith. For 57.5 per cent of Swiss citizens, the minaret, an obligatory adjunct to a mosque which is used by the muezzin to call the faithful to prayers five times a day, is now a “political symbol against integration”. They view each new minaret as marking the transmogrification of Christian Europe into Islamic Eurabia. The Islamic minaret, according to Swiss People’s Party legislator Ulrich Schluer, has come to represent the “effort to establish sharia’h on European soil”. Hence the counter-effort to ban their construction.

Last Sunday’s referendum and the massive vote against Islamic minarets is by no means an unexpected development, as is being pretended by Islamists and those who find it fashionable to defend Islamism or are scared of taking a stand lest they be accused of Islamophobia. Resentment against assertive political Islam has been building up in Switzerland for almost a decade, triggered by refugees from Yugoslavia’s many civil wars seeking to irreversibly change the Swiss way of life to suit their twisted notions of Islam’s supremacy. For the past many years the Swiss People’s Party and the Federal Democratic Union, both avowedly right-of-centre organisations, have been trying to initiate an amendment to Article 72 of Switzerland’s Constitution to include the sentence, “The building of minarets is prohibited.” After doing the cantonal rounds, both the parties set up a joint Egerkinger Committee in 2007 to take their campaign to the federal level. The November 29 referendum is the outcome of that campaign.

The resultant vote — 57.5 per cent endorsing the proposed amendment to the Constitution with 42.5 opposing it — provides some interesting insights. For instance, the Swiss Government and Parliament, which are opposed to the amendment, clearly suffer from a disconnect with the Swiss masses. The voting pattern also shows that the spurious ‘cosmopolitan spirit’ of Zurich, Geneva and Basel, where people voted against the ban by a narrow margin, is not shared by most Swiss. The initiative has got 19.5 of the 23 cantonal votes — Basel city Canton, with half-a-vote and the largest Muslim population in Switzerland, barely defeated the initiative with 51.61 per cent people voting against it. This only goes to show that the Left-liberal intelligentsia may dominate television studio debates, as is often seen in our country, but it neither influences public opinion nor persuades those whose perception of the reality is not cluttered by bogus ‘tolerance’ of the intolerant.

Daniel Pipes, who is among the few scholars of Islam not scared to be labelled an ‘Islamophobe’, is of the view that the Swiss vote “represents a turning point for European Islam, one comparable to the Rushdie affair of 1989. That a large majority of Swiss who voted on Sunday explicitly expressed anti-Islamic sentiments potentially legitimates such sentiments across Europe and opens the way for others to follow suit”. As always, Pipes is prescient. An opinion poll conducted by the French Institute for Public Opinion after the Swiss referendum shows 46 per cent of French citizens are in favour of banning the construction of minarets, 40 per cent support the idea, while 14 per cent are indecisive. “That it was the usually quiet, low profile, un-newsworthy, politically boring, neutral Swiss who suddenly roared their fears about Islam only enhances their vote’s impact,” says Pipes. The post-referendum opinion poll in France shows that one in two French citizens would not only like to see minarets banned, but along with them mosques, too.

Yet, it may be too early to suggest that the tide of Islamism will now have to contend with the fury of a backlash. Governments and organisations that find merit in toeing the line of least resistance have reacted harshly to the Swiss vote; rather than try and understand why more and more people are beginning to loathe, if not hate, Islamism, a case is being made all over again for the need to be tolerant with those whose sole desire is to subjugate the world to Islam. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms Navi Pillay, who is yet to utter a word about the suppression of freedom and denial of dignity in Islamic countries or the shocking violation of human rights by jihadis, has been scathing in her response, describing the Swiss vote as “a discriminatory, deeply divisive and thoroughly unfortunate step”. The Organisation of Islamic Conference has warned that the vote will “serve to spread hatred and intolerance towards Muslims”. The OIC’s complaint would carry credibility if it were to demand tolerance towards non-Muslims in its member-countries, especially Saudi Arabia, and denounce Islam’s preachers of hate.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Ahmedinejad slams capitalism
2009-11-10
Capitalism is the cause of the global economic recession and an Islamic banking system is the only way to revive battered world economies, Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday.

Addressing a one-day meeting of the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC), Ahmadinejad said investment based on interests was usury, which "is entrenched in the capitalist system... and is perhaps the main reason why the system has gone bankrupt". "It is a way of accumulating capital without working. Usury, according to the holy Quran, is [tantamount to] fighting with Allah," said Ahmadinejad. Islamic banks operate on sharia law, which bans such investments. The banks instead make money using a system of profit-sharing from returns on approved investments. Islamic banks exist in all oil-rich Arab Gulf countries and in most Islamic states. Ahmadinejad did not mention Iran's struggling economy, nor did he refer to its dispute with the West over its nuclear activities. Somalia's President Sheikh Sharif Sheik Ahmed also slammed the "wrongdoing and mistakes and absence of transparency" of international financial institutions in the crisis. President Kurmanbek Bakiyev of Kyrgyzstan said he intended to turn his country into "a regional centre for the expansion of Islamic financing".

The $1 trillion Islamic finance faced difficulties during the global financial crisis but was relatively insulated because of Islam's ban on handling interest-bearing financial instruments.Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad and President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan also attended. Turkish President Abdullah Gul spoke on behalf of the developing nations in the OIC, despite the fact that Turkey has a western-style banking system.
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Southeast Asia
Two village chiefs killed in Thai south
2009-08-09
Two Muslim village leaders were killed in drive-by shootings in Thailand's restive southernmost provinces, police said on Sunday. The attacks took place at the weekend in Yala and Pattani, two of the three mainly Muslim provinces in predominantly Buddhist Thailand, which have been plagued by five years of separatist violence.

Gunmen on a motorcycle killed an assistant village chief in the Muang district of Yala early Sunday, police said. Late on Saturday, a village headman was shot dead in front of his home in Yaring, Pattani by unknown assailants riding in a pickup truck armed with M-16 assault rifles.

The attacks came during a two-day visit to the region by Bangkok-based diplomats from member countries of the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC), the world's largest Muslim body, which has criticised Thai security forces for their handling of the conflict. The OIC demanded an end to attacks on Muslims after 11 were shot dead while praying in a mosque in southern Thailand in June.
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India-Pakistan
India rebuffs OIC comments on Kashmir
2008-08-15
New Delhi: India on Thursday rebuffed the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) for its comments on the violence in Jammu and Kashmir and asked it not to meddle in the country's internal affairs.

"We note with regret the statement made by the OIC Secretary- General on the situation in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir," External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Navtej Sarna told reporters here. "The OIC has once again chosen to comment upon Jammu and Kashmir and India's internal affairs on which it has no locus standi. We reject such comments," he said.

The OIC, an international organisation that brings together 57 states, professes to speak for the interests of Muslims in the world.

OIC Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu on Thursday strongly condemned "the ongoing excessive and unwarranted use of force against the Kashmiri people". It also urged the Indian government to end the violence in the interest of sustaining the India-Pakistan peace process, central to which is a peaceful settlement of the Kashmir dispute.

He called for steps on the part of international humanitarian and human rights organisations, including the UN Human Rights Council, to address the situation in a manner that would prevent human rights violations in the Indian Kashmir.

The OIC's comments come close on the heels of Pakistan's assertion that it will approach the UN and other global bodies on the Kashmir issue.

The critical comments of the OIC on alleged human rights violations in Jammu and Kashmir, in the course of the nearly two-month-old agitation sparked by a row over the transfer of land to a Hindu shrine, echoes that of Pakistan.

In the past, the OIC had routinely pressed for a resolution of the Kashmir issue and called for asserting the aspirations of the people of Kashmir - which were invariably rejected with equal vehemence by India.

India has strongly rebuffed Pakistan's attempt to internationalise the Kashmir issue by approaching the UN and other international bodies like the OIC.

India also strongly reacted to Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf's remarks on the violence in Jammu and Kashmir and warned Islamabad not to interfere in its internal affairs. New Delhi warned Islamabad to desist from such a course of action that is "gratuitous and illegal" and has the potential to harm the peace process between the two countries.

"To call for international involvement in the sovereign internal affairs of India is gratuitous, illegal and only reflects reversion to a mindset that has led to no good consequences for Pakistan in the past," external affairs ministry spokesperson Navtej Sarna said in a statement.
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