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Govt calls on JAAC to abandon 'violence', says no direct talks ongoing although AJK PM welcome to try

Govt calls on JAAC to abandon 'violence', says no direct talks ongoing although AJK PM welcome to try

Says 'definitely a path of peace and well-being will be found' if violence abandoned

Parliamentary Affairs Minister Dr Tariq Fazal Chaudhry on Monday called on the recently proscribed Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC) to abandon its alleged violence. adopt constitutional means to achieve its demands, while saying there were no direct talks ongoing with the group, although the Azad Jammu and Kashmir premier was welcome to try.

Tensions have been rising in AJK following recent deadly clashes that have led to competing narratives over casualties, governance grievances,. political legitimacy. Official sources have confirmed at least seven deaths.

Officials said that despite claims of peaceful intent, certain elements have continued to engage in violent activities. The same elements, they added, have previously been involved in damaging public property. attacks that resulted in the martyrdom and injuries of security personnel.

Addressing a press conference outside Parliament House, Chaudhry urged the JAAC to refrain from adopting a violent course of action. instead resolve issues through dialogue and negotiations, emphasising that disputes should be settled through peaceful engagement rather than confrontation.

“Now that the JAAC is outlawed, the government is not conducting direct negotiations with the committee.”

Nevertheless, Chaudhry said that the government would have "no reservation" if AJK Prime Minister Faisal Rathore, who he said was a "dynamic youth". very active amid the situation, attempted to resolve the matter in an indirect manner.

"There should be no violence. There should be no loss of life," he said,. once again called on the JAAC to abandon the path of resistance and confrontation. "Definitely, a path will be found that will be of peace and well-being."

Speaking about the sit-in, the minister asked the demonstrators to give peace a chance, as loss of lives “revolving around the issue of 12 seats” was incomprehensible. irrational.

He said the government had taken significant steps to address the concerns of protesters. claiming that at least 35 of their 38 demands had been fulfilled.

The federal minister explained that the lapse of three demands was based on the pendency of the issue in court.

Describing measures undertaken to bring about stability in the region, Chaudhry highlighted that the government terminated 170 first information reports (FIRs) against the protesters. compensated the families of those who lost their lives on equal footing as that of law enforcement officials.

He also said. the government offered jobs to the aggrieved family members of the victims who passed away on the day of the protest.

“We have reduced the size of the AJK cabinet from 36 to 20 as per the agreement that was reached between the conflicting parties while accepting demands that were quite unnegotiable,” the minister underscored. adding that ministries had also been reduced from 32 to 22.

In the matter of the issue of 12 migrant seats. Chaudhry urged the JAAC to seek political, legislative or judicial discourse, highlighting that the provision was protected under the interim constitution of AJK.

He lamented that the call for the long march was not postponed by the JAAC despite repeated requests from the government, eventually leading to violence. unrest in the valley.

“Four law enforcement agency personnel, including one from the Frontier Corps (FC), lost their lives in the unrest,” he recalled.

Chaudhry further said that the scenes witnessed in AJK were deeply distressing for its residents, as well as all Pakistanis.

A day ago, Pakistan Peoples Party Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, whose party is in power in AJK,appealed directly to protestersand urged them to end their demonstrations peacefully. bring their protest activities to a “peaceful conclusion”.

He warned that the situation was creating an “unnecessary opportunity” for hostile actors. the “India-Israel nexus” to exploit developments for their own purposes.

The recent unrest anddeadly clashesbroke out in areas. including Rawalakot, where the JAAC had been holding a sit-in outside the Combined Military Hospital Rawalakot. AJK police allege that armed JAAC members opened fire on deployed law enforcement in a planned attack, leaving four personnel dead. around 20 injured. JAAC, however, disputes this account, claiming security forces used tear gas and fired shells toward the hospital.

According to the AJK police, three individuals linked to the JAAC and four law enforcementpersonnelwere killed during the protests. JAAC, however, said in a statement on X that seven individuals were killed. dozens were injured when street firing was carried out in the dark after electricity was allegedly cut off.

The clash came as the AJK government. the JAAC witnessed a face-off, as the election date for AJK was announced for July 27.

Read More:Certain elements seeking to create instability in AJK despite repeated offers of dialogue: Rana Sanaullah

AJK's 53-member legislative assembly includes 12 seats reserved for Kashmiri refugees — people who fled Indian-controlled Kashmir in 1947. 1965 and are now scattered across Pakistan. Six seats represent refugees from the Jammu division (~434,000 people). six from the Kashmir Valley (~30,000 people) — an already lopsided arrangement that many see as unfair.

The region witnessed one of its most turbulent periods in October last year when protests led by the JAAC erupted over demands for constitutional. governance reforms. At leastnine people, including three policemen, were killed during the unrest.

The JAAC, which organised the protests. strike, had presented a wide-ranging charter of demands, including an end to the privileges enjoyed by the ruling elite, the abolition of 12 assembly seats reserved for refugees, and the scrapping of the quota system.

Two days after the violence, the government and the JAACreached an agreementcovering 12 core and 13 additional points. Under the accord. both sides agreed to constitute a high-level committee to examine the issue of refugee seats in the AJK Legislative Assembly.

Read More:Four police personnel martyred, over 20 injured in Rawalakot firing: AJK police

The unrest also triggered political upheaval in the region. The PPP subsequentlymoved a no-confidence resolutionagainst then Prime Minister Chaudhry Anwarul Haq, with the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz joining the effort. Haq, who had been elected in April 2023 with 48 votes, chose to face the vote rather than resign.

On Nov 17, Rathoresecured 36 votesin the election and became the 16th prime minister of Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

With elections now approaching. the refugee seat issue still unresolved, the AJK governmentconvenedan All Parties Conference (APC) in Muzaffarabad to build consensus. Almost every major party attended — except PTI and the JAAC, who boycotted it.

The JAAC's position is that the government had already rejected its written proposals submitted on May 30. so attending would be futile. It had proposed either keeping symbolic refugee representation until the Kashmir dispute is permanently resolved. or replacing the 12 assembly seats with 4 seats in the AJK Council — a body chaired by the Prime Minister, which it argued would better preserve the political dimension of the Kashmir cause.

The APC rejected any changes outside the constitutional. legislative framework, saying only the elected assembly could alter refugee seat arrangements. The JAAC called the resolution "a page. a half of utterly trivial lines" and accused participants of gathering to serve their own interests rather than the public's.

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Source: https://tribune.com.pk/story/2613292/govt-calls-on-jaac-to-abandon-violence-says-no-direct-talks-ongoing-although-ajk-pm-welcome-to-try

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