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Gilgit-Baltistan to be a full province: Pakistan PM

November 02, 2020 10:28 pm | Updated January 06, 2021 11:59 am IST

He did not give a timeline for the move

FILE PHOTO: Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan speaks during a joint news conference with Malaysia's Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad (not pictured) in Putrajaya, Malaysia, February 4, 2020. REUTERS/Lim Huey Teng/File Photo

Prime Minister Imran Khan has angered India after declaring that part of the contested Kashmir region will provisionally become a full province of Pakistan.

Pakistan has administered the area now known as Gilgit-Baltistan since shortly after the country’s birth in 1947, but New Delhi asserts the mountainous territory bordering China and Afghanistan is an integral part of Kashmir.

“We have decided to grant provisional provincial status to Gilgit-Baltistan, which was a long-standing demand here,” Mr. Khan said in a speech in Gilgit city on Sunday.

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The move comes after New Delhi last year revoked the special status of Kashmir, upending a decades-long status quo and drawing strong condemnation from Islamabad.

Mr. Khan, who was speaking ahead of local elections slated for November 15, did not provide a timeline for the move.

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Chinese role

China has spent years building infrastructure projects in Gilgit-Baltistan, home to an estimated 1.3 million people, including a long stretch of the Karakoram Highway, a key component to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Mr. Khan said the modern and well-maintained road had brought important progress to Gilgit-Baltistan and the move to make the area a province would help “uplift backward areas and poor segments of society”.

Any change in status would require a constitutional amendment. If finalised, it would make Gilgit-Baltistan Pakistan’s fifth province.

 

‘Illegal occupation’

New Delhi condemned Mr. Khan’s announcement, saying it would “bring material changes to a part of Indian territory”.

“Such attempts by Pakistan, intended to camouflage its illegal occupation, cannot hide the grave human rights violations, exploitation and denial of freedom for over seven decades to the people residing in these Pakistan-occupied territories,” India’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Shri Anurag Srivastava said in a statement.

Two of the three wars the rival neighbours have fought since independence have been over Kashmir — home to shrinking Himalayan glaciers seen as vital lifelines to the water stressed countries.

In a move that outraged Pakistan, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government last year revoked articles in the Constitution that guaranteed Kashmir’s partial autonomy and other rights, including its own flag and Constitution. The two parts of Kashmir are divided by a Line of Control that is subject to frequent cross-border shellings.

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