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Sidhidesh as an independent nation: JSMM demands United Nations recognition

Sindhi Nationalist Group, Jia Sindh Muttahida Mahaz (JSMM), under the leadership of exiled chairman Shafi Snow, has issued a renewed argument to the United Nations and other international communities, has urged the recognition of Sindhudha as an independent nation and is called as a violation of continuous political oppression and human rights.In a comprehensive political manifesto called the Indo -Global Freedom Charter, JSMM has approached the United Nations, International Human Rights Bodies, Democratic Governments and Global Civil Social Social Organizations, arguing that Sindhi people are subject to a form of internal colonialism under Pakistan’s military and political establishment.In a direct appeal to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Indian public, JSMM cited historical and cultural relations between Sindh and India, requested moral and political solidarity. The group also called for international institutions to send supervisors of the inserts, document the alleged violation and attach to Sindh for peaceful self -determination.The JSMM alleges that the demographic engineering has diluted the ethnic composition of Sindh through the state-proposed rehabilitation, threatening the linguistic and cultural identity of the Sindhi people. Environmental decline, especially the turn of the Indus River water, has increased local complaints, which once quoted as an ecological result of state policy with a wider desert of-rich land.The statement strongly condemned Pakistan’s security forces to violate serious human rights in Sindh, including the disappearance of political activists, journalists and student leaders, torture and extraordinary murders. It mentioned that the anti -terrorism law is being misused to target secular and nationalist movements, while religious extremists receive support from the state.Giving itself a position as a secular, democratic movement, JSMM has repeated its vision for a sovereign Republic of Sindhudhesh, which is based in the principles of equality, minority safety and social justice. The group calls for international law, including Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), including the United Nations Charter and International Covenant to support Sindh’s right to self -determination.Long before the modern borders pulled, Sindh flourished as the heart of the ancient Indus Valley Civilization, which was a sophisticated urban society that emerged on the banks of the Indus River 5,000 years ago. With the plan of advanced city, complex craftsmanship and a vibrant trading culture, Sindh was once a beacon of early human progress. One of the most prestigious places of civilization, Mohenjo-Daro, still stands as a will for the intellectual and architectural heritage of the region.This deep -root historical identity is the central for the Sindhi nationalist story, which sees contemporary political conflicts as a continuity of a decent arc in the form of colonial victory and post partition state formation.In The colonial era, Sindh, existed as a separate administrative region under British India, and was eventually established in 1936 as a separate province. Advocates of Sindhi autonomy argued that this period promoted a unique political consciousness, a one that emphasized cultural opposition and regional pride. However, the division of 1947 defined not only the boundaries but also identity.In later decades, Sindhi activists have pointed to a pattern of political margins and centralized control, arguing that their historical autonomy has been systematically separated.Preparing Sindh’s struggle as both civilization and contemporary, the Charter located the area within the historical heritage of the Indus Valley Civilization, saying that Sindh was forced to join Pakistan in 1947 and has ever faced cultural eradication and economic exploitation. The document claims that Sindh resources have been systematically extracted to benefit other areas including oil, gas, coal, fertile farm and deep sea ports, while the local population remains economically marginalized.While the claims of JSMM are politically charged and remain inadvertently by the Pakistani state, Charter is an important step in internationalization that has largely been a domestic struggle.

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