Why interfere? China turns blatant for third demanding discussion on Kashmir in UNSC

News Bharati    16-Jan-2020 11:07:34 AM
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New Delhi, January 16: In its third and unlatched attempt since August 2019 when the special status granted to J&K under Art 370 of the Constitution was scrapped by the government, China on Wednesday has again moved up demanding discussion on Kashmir during a closed door meeting of the UN Security Council in New York.
 
While the request is likely to be rejected as other member countries of the global organisation are set to oppose it, China seemingly is in no state to stop interfering in the internal matters of India. The Ministry of External Affairs last year had clearly asked the neigbouring nation to stay out of India's in-house matters as India never did to them.
 
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Meanwhile, the French diplomatic officials said that France has noted the request of a UNSC member to raise the Kashmir issue once again in the powerful body and it is going to oppose it like it did on a previous occasion. The closed-door meeting of the UNSC has been called to discuss an issue relating to Mali, an African country and China has made a request to discuss the Kashmir issue under the agenda of 'Any Other Business Points'.
 
Asserting that France's position has not changed and it is very clear that the Kashmir issue must be settled bilaterally (between India and Pakistan), French diplomats also said this has been stated on several occasions, and it will continued to be reiterated to partners in the UN Security Council. This is the third time, China, Pakistan's 'all-weather ally', has demanded discussion on the Kashmir issue.
 
In August, China pushed for a UNSC meeting on Kashmir after the government scrapped J-K's special status. However, the meeting did not yielded desired results for China as the member-states maintained that India's move was an internal issue. Last month, France, the US, the UK and Russia had foiled an attempt by China to discuss Kashmir at a closed-door meeting of the UNSC.
 
China has been critical of India's reorganisation of J-K, and has particularly criticised New Delhi for making Ladakh a union territory as it lays claim over several parts of Ladakh. India's decisions on Kashmir had also cast a shadow over Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to India in October for the second informal summit with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.