India slams Erdoğan for Kashmir remarks at UN

India lambasted remarks
by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Kashmir during his speech to the
United Nations General Assembly (UNGA).
Erdoğan's comments
"constitute gross interference in India’s internal affairs and are
completely unacceptable,” T S Tirumurti, India’s permanent representative to
the U.N., said in a tweet on Wednesday.
"Turkey should
learn to respect sovereignty of other nations and reflect on its own policies
more deeply,” he said.
During a general debate
at the U.N., Erdoğan said the topic of Jammu and Kashmir remained a “burning
issue”, and that a resolution was important to stability and peace in the
region.
“Steps taken following the abolition
of the special status of Jammu-Kashmir further complicated the problem,” the
Turkish president said in a pre-recorded video message. He also called for the
matter to be resolved through negotiation.
The Indian-Pakistani
dispute over Kashmir has led to several conflicts since the countries’
partition in 1947. The Indian government withdrew the autonomy of Kashmir in
August last year, shutting down internet access in the region and detaining
activists and politicians.
Erdoğan, an outspoken
critic of Indian policy toward Kashmir, said during a speech at the Pakistani
parliament in February that resolving the future of the occupied region was of
similar importance to Turkey’s own war of independence early last century.
The strategic
relationship between Turkey and Pakistan has strengthened in the last few
years, and Erdoğan has been bringing up the Kashmir issue at international
gatherings.
Turkey and Pakistan have
close defence links, with the countries participating in joint naval exercises
in the eastern Mediterranean, where Turkey is embroiled in energy disputes. The
two countries inked a dual citizenship deal last year.
Islamabad has also
signed up to buy 30 Turkish ATAK helicopters by next year, the two countries
are jbuilding a 17,000-tonne tanker in pakistan’s southern port city of
Karachi, and Turkey is supplying the Pakistani navy with four corvettes in a
multi-billion dollar deal hailed as the biggest ever for the Turkish defence
industry.
One of the reasons
behind Erdoğan's support for Islamabad is Ankara's interest in launching its
own nuclear arms programme, Indian news website Republic World said on Wednesday.
Erdoğan increasingly
sees Pakistan, one of the nine countries in the world that owns nuclear
weapons, as a potential partner for Turkey’s possible attempts to acquire a
nuclear capability, it said.
Erdoğan signalled his
interest in acquiring nuclear weapons in a speech to the UNGA last year, wheh
he said weapons of mass destruction should be forbidden or allowed for all
countries.