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High time to raise Kashmir issue at US Congress: Ilhan

Hopes her visit will help foreigners get over misgivings about Pakistan


Tuesday, 26 April 2022


LAHORE, Apr 25: US Congresswoman Ilhan Omar has said that meeting victims of Indian ceasefire violations and "seeing them suffer" had made it all the more necessary than before to raise the Kashmir issue at the US Congress, reports The Express Tribune.
"Having met the Kashmiri people in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK), who nurse the bullet wounds, due to ceasefire violations by India, is an incredible experience," she said when asked about her bold stance on the issues of Kashmir and Palestine.
She shared that the first-hand experience has put her under "an obligation to stand for human rights and human dignity".
During her four-day visit at the invitation of the Pakistani government, the US Congresswoman visited the Line of Control (LoC) in AJK and held meetings with a number of key government officials, including the president, prime minister, and cabinet members as well as leaders of political parties.
She also visited the Walled City of Lahore.
Ilhan said she had always taken up the questions of Kashmir and Palestine in the Congress but, she added: "I had not had the opportunity to visit the place in person. It was incredibly awful to meet the people first hand and ask them how they want to be in a partnership with me as a lawmaker and advocate of (the) human rights."
When asked if she would raise the issue at the Congress, she said having met the people in person and seeing them suffer made the necessity of raising the issue at the Congress more urgent than listening to it from others. About herself, Ilhan said her story was of "trial and triumph".
"I was born in Somalia but had to flee the country due to civil war and lived for four years in generous Kenya before me and my family were sponsored to come to the United States of America (USA).
"Here I was able to continue my studies and live in a community of warm-hearted people, although Minnesota is very cold, for the past 20 years. I represent people of my community in the US Congress.
"I am someone who has experienced oppression and violation of human rights at a young age, and since I have been put into a position of power by the people, I deem it my duty to advocate for those who don't have that power."