Pakistan condemns Indian attempt to 'illegally' alter IOK demography.

ISLAMABAD -- Prime Minister Imran Khan on Thursday said that Pakistan strongly condemns the Indian government's continued attempts to 'illegally' alter the demography in occupied Kashmir. He was referring to the new domicile law introduced by the Indian government, under which an Indian citizen, who has lived in occupied Jammu and Kashmir for 15 years, can call the territory their place of domicile.

Through a gazette notification issued by the Indian government on Wednesday, a domiciled person has been defined as one who has resided for a period of 15 years in the occupied territory of Jammu and Kashmir or has studied for a period of seven years and appeared in class 10 or 12 examinations in an educational institution located there.

The prime minister in a post on Twitter said that the new domicile law was in 'violation of all international laws and treaties'. Calling the timing of the move 'particularly reprehensible', he said the action sought to exploit the international focus on the Covid-19 pandemic to further the Bharatiya Janata Party's 'Hindutva' agenda. A statement issued by the Foreign Office earlier in the day also stated that the Reorganisation Order 2020 was a violation of international law and the Geneva Convention.

The statement said Pakistan had been trying to sensitise the world community to India's attempt to change the 'demography and distinct identity' of Kashmir. 'The latest Indian action, at this moment of global health crisis, is particularly reprehensible as it seeks to take advantage of the international community's focus on the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic and further...

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