In a reinforcing manner making its point, India today  asserted that democracy is an “alien” concept for Pakistan, and called upon Islamabad to end grave human rights violations in territories under its illegal occupation, where the population is in “open revolt” against military occupation, repression, brutality and exploitation. It  also maintained that J&K is an integral and inalienable part of India.
Responding to references made by Pakistan’s envoy at the UN Security Council’s open debate on ‘The United Nations Organisation: Looking into the Future’ on Friday, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish, said,“The people of Jammu and Kashmir exercise their fundamental rights in accordance with India’s time-tested democratic traditions and constitutional framework.”“We, of course, know that these are concepts alien to Pakistan,” he said.
The envoy reiterated that Jammu and Kashmir “has been, is, and will always be” an integral and inalienable part of India.Strongly rebuking Islamabad, Harish said, “We call upon Pakistan to end the grave and ongoing human rights violations in the areas illegally occupied by it, where the population is in open revolt against Pakistan’s military occupation, repression, brutality and illegal exploitation of resources.”
 
Harish also emphasised that the UN must undertake “real, comprehensive reforms,” saying that the 80-year-old Security Council architecture no longer reflects contemporary geopolitical realities.“An outdated Council architecture that mirrors the geopolitical realities of 1945 is not equipped to handle the challenges of 2025,” he said, calling for expansion in both permanent and non-permanent categories through “time-bound” and “text-based negotiations”.
 
 
 
Highlighting India’s commitment to multilateralism, he said the world must move beyond “pennies and posts” to craft a new vision for the UN that is more agile and responsive to global challenges such as pandemics, terrorism, economic instability, and climate change.
Harish noted that the world’s largest multilateral body faces questions of “relevance, legitimacy, credibility, and efficacy”.
 
Harish also called for making UN mechanisms more agile, noting that peacekeepers face “newer challenges every day” and need realistic mandates, adequate resources, and technological support.“Structural adjustments of different UN bodies are welcome, but not enough,” he said, urging that UN80, the 80th anniversary of the organisation, should aim for “real, comprehensive reforms of the UN and its principal organs.”
 
Harish further emphasised the need to revitalise the General Assembly as the UN’s principal deliberative and policymaking body, enhancing coordination with other organs, particularly the Security Council, to realise the purposes and principles of the UN Charter.He cautioned member states against using the UN as a “theatre for divisive politics and parochial purposes,” saying, “In a world fractured and fragmented along multiple fault lines, the United Nations… is the only vehicle we possess to harness our collective energies for global public good.”