On both sides of the LoC, Kashmiris commemorate "Accession to Pakistan Day" today.

On both sides of the LoC, Kashmiris commemorate "Accession to Pakistan Day" today.

Today (Tuesday), Kashmiris on both sides of the Line of Control and throughout the world are commemorating Accession to Pakistan Day with a renewed commitment to continue the fight for Jammu and Kashmir's liberation from Indian domination and full fusion with Pakistan.


On this day in 1947, during a gathering of the All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference held at Sardar Muhammad Ibrahim Khan's house in Srinagar, authentic representatives of the Kashmiris unanimously approved the resolution of Kashmir's accession to Pakistan.
The Princely States were free to join any of the two newly formed republics, as was intended under the British India Partition Plan.
The 19th of July 1947 ruling served as evidence of Kashmir's people's determination to tie their destiny to Pakistan.

In their individual remarks, the APHC leaders referred to July 19 as a significant turning point in Jammu and Kashmir's history.

They claimed Kashmiris would not stop fighting until Jammu and Kashmir was liberated from Indian rule and incorporated into Pakistan. The leaders exhorted the people of Kashmir to band together and fight India's nefarious plans to put an end to their independence movement while rejecting the barbaric policies being implemented by the Modi administration in the occupied area.

Tuesday is a public holiday in Azad Jammu and Kashmir to make it easier for the general people to take part in the special celebrations of the Accession to Pakistan Day.

In Azad Jammu Kashmir, Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir, as well as other countries where Kashmiris reside, extensive programmes have been planned to celebrate the day.

The purpose of this day is to support and advance the idea of Jammu and Kashmir's full accession to Pakistan.

Pakistan reiterates its unwavering support for Kashmiris on Martyrs Day.

To honour the bravery and sacrifices of the Kashmiris, Kashmir Martyr Day is honoured in Pakistan, on both sides of the Line of Control, and by the Kashmiri and Pakistani diasporas worldwide.

The 91st Kashmir Martyrs' Day is being respectfully observed today in Pakistan, according to a statement from the Foreign Office.

On July 13, 1931, 22 Kashmiris were shot dead by Dogra monarch Maharaja Hari Singh's soldiers as they sought to finish the call to prayer outside the Srinagar jail. This atrocity is honoured as the festival of Yaum-e-Shuhada-e-Kashmir.

The inhabitants of the contested valley had revolted against Dogra control and denounced the prosecution of Abdul Qadeer Khan Ghazi, a supporter of the Kashmir conflict.

As a result, Kashmiris on both sides of the Line of Control and around the world began to fight for their independence.

After Article 370 was repealed in 2019, the BJP, the government in India, deleted Kashmir Martyrs' Day from the list of recognised holidays. Instead, October 26 was added to the calendar as "Accession Day," which was actually the Day of Occupation of Jammu and Kashmir.

Since the lockdown when Indian soldiers increased their brutality towards locals, Kashmir has been subjected to years of abuse.

As militarization and dehumanisation rise, frustration and discontent are growing in the IIOJK.

PM REVIVEWS OVER KASHMIR

On Martyrs' Day, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also voiced his solidarity with Kashmiris, describing it as a reminder of the sacrifices they had made for their unalienable and UN-sanctioned right to self-determination.

In response to Indian oppression and tyranny, the premier claimed on Twitter that generations of Kashmiris have kept the flame of liberation from the Indian yoke alive.

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