London: The state of Jammu and Kashmir is clearly a victim of a deliberate proxy war engineered and promoted by a terrorist-supporting Pakistan, a well known writer on Kashmiri affairs has claimed

Participating in a recent day-long conference organised jointly by the University of Leicester and the European Foundation for South Asian Studies (EFSAS), Junaid Qureshi said, "The soil of the state of Jammu and Kashmir has been blemished by years of terrorism, military power, proxy warfare, toxic propaganda and rise of extremism.."

He categorically cautioned all stakeholders, be it in India or Pakistan, must realize and accept "that guns and bombs will not solve the Jammu and Kashmir issue. On the contrary, it will only lead to more deaths and destruction."

Suggesting that acts of terror have been taking place on the Indian side of Jammu and Kashmir not since 1989, but since 1947 when the Indian subcontinent was partitioned by the then British colonial rulers, Qureshi, a Director of EFSAS, said that post 1989-90, "a great deal of militant energy was released, whereby the Pakistani military establishment and intelligence agencies provided arms and training to militants and relocated them to and inside Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir."

These terrorists, he said, "engaged in communal violence among different religious groups and specifically targeted Kashmiri Pandits, a minority Kashmiri Hindu community."

These terrorists, he claimed, had succeeded in intimidating local people and authorities through their Pakistan-backed covert armed militancy and tactics, and suggested that Islamabad is not keen for an all-out war with Delhi.

"The violence in Jammu and Kashmir was a proxy war against India through which Pakistan attempted to impose a heavy political and economic burden on its nuclear neighbour.. the military establishment of Pakistan provided all kinds of support, including training, ammunition and shelter to the terrorists in a bid to bring down Indian authority," he said.

Qureshi said in a sense he was relieved and happy to be invited by the University of Leicester to expose the real designs of globally-designated terrorists like Hafiz Saeed, that of trying to recruit youngsters from the South Asian Diaspora to fight in Jammu and Kashmir.

This university, he said, had made the mistake of extending an invitation to Saeed in 1995 to address students while he was on a speaking tour across UK mosques, Islamic centers and universities.

"Hafiz Saeed's lectures at this university in 1995 were acts of terrorism which had only brought death and destruction to Jammu and Kashmir and the region of South Asia," Qureshi pointed out.

Qureshi and other keynote speakers at the conference also engaged participating students in intense debates over the region of Jammu and Kashmir, terrorism in Jammu and Kashmir, the building of the USD 60 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor and India-Pakistan relations.

The deliberations resulted in the drafting a comprehensive resolution that supported the creation of programs to address the growing radicalisation of youth in Jammu and Kashmir and encouragement for application of tougher counter-terrorism policies, including, but not limited to, the creation of bilateral agreements between India and Pakistan to share intelligence.

In conclusion, Qureshi said the new narrative should be creation of an environment of tranquillity to facilitating a peaceful political solution to the Jammu and Kashmir conflict, and this could only be achieved if the region is liberated from terrorism, violence and fear.