Supreme head of Muslim Conference and former AJK premier Sardar Abdul Qayyum Khan has said that Pakistan-India talks on Indian occupied Kashmir will not be result-oriented as they do not involve Kashmiris and as New Delhi takes these parleys to pursue its own interests.
While talking to a group of local journalists here on Sunday, he said talks were deprived of concrete measures on resolving the issue and they were being used to address non-issues.
The MC leader declared that Pakistan-India dialogue would not produce any tangible results for Kashmiris and urged both the countries to at least seek an interim settlement of the issue.
He said areas along the Line of Control (LoC) should be demilitarised and isolated families of the both parts of the state should be allowed to meet.
Qayyum, responding to a question said that in India there was a coalition government of Congress and it was not in a position to take decision independently.
Therefore, he called for the government of Pakistan to not to remain in fool's paradise. The former Prime Minister lamented the role played by the international community towards the resolution of the Indian occupied Kashmir dispute.
He said the Katmandu conference and the European Union's report on human rights violation in the state were not instrumental in forcing India to honour the Kashmiris.
Replying to a question he said a parliamentary system was well-versed in the state and it was according to the people's needs. He denied a notion that army might intervene in the state affairs and a presidential form of rule might be enforced. He said the masses needed managers not the leaders to improve their life standards and enhance their economic conditions.
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