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Pakistan conceded the Kashmir conflict! Speaking at the UN, Bilawal Bhutto declared, "No one listens to us."

 

Bilawal Bhutto on Kashmir: The Shimla Accord, which was signed by Indira Gandhi, the then-President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the then-Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, and others, determined in 1972 that any conflicts involving Kashmir and its neighbours were bilateral concerns.

Pakistan has nonetheless brought up the Kashmir issue.

On Friday, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari acknowledged that the diplomatic efforts of India had made it impossible for his country to move Kashmir to the "heart" of the United Nations agenda.

Zardari said, "Whenever the topic of Kashmir is mentioned... our neighbouring country vociferously raises strong objections and they push a post facto narrative," in a statement to the media on the sidelines of the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW). Are."

The Shimla Accord, which was signed in 1972 by the then-president, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, the present foreign minister of Pakistan, Bilawal Bhutto, and the previous prime leader Indira Gandhi Nehru, declared that all conflicts involving Kashmir and its neighbours were bilateral matters.

Notwithstanding this, Pakistan has brought up the Kashmir dispute numerous times before the UN, including both during UN Security Council meetings and other gatherings where it was irrelevant.

India made a jab.
For instance, at a Security Council discussion on women, peace, and security, India rebuked the foreign minister for bringing up Kashmir.
The claims made by the foreign minister did not "deserve," according to India's ambassador to the UN, Ruchira Kamboj.

"Before I end, I must renounce the foolish, unsubstantiated, and politically motivated accusations made by the representative of Pakistan regarding the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir," Kamboj stated on March 8.

Kamboj stated, "My delegation feels that it is not appropriate to reply to such vicious and misleading propaganda," during the discussion on the theme of "Women, Peace and Security" in the UN Security Council. Our attention should instead be on the future and the positive. The topic of today's conversation is crucial to bolstering our group's efforts to fully advance the agenda of women, peace, and security. We appreciate the topic under discussion and understand how valuable time is. On this subject, we should concentrate our attention.

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