¶ … Peace Treat between India and Pakistan:
The primary objective of the peace process is 1) to expand and intensify people to people contact, 2) broaden and consolidate the peace process by encouraging new associations as well as those groups who have been operating for enduring peace in South Asia for the preceding 58 years, and 3) give enhanced ethical, academic, community and cultural resources to assist in maintaining long-lasting peace.
The peace treaty should read:
Both governments should welcome and support the peace process by engaging in a composite dialogue between directed towards creating righteous and long-lasting peace in South Asia.
The ultimate settlement on issues, of Kashmir, international terrorism and nuclear weapons, between, both, India and Pakistan, ought to be founded on the Doctrine of Peaceful Co-Existence, that is, autonomous parity, non-violence, non-intrusion, mutual and shared advantage, and nonviolent co-existence
Both governments should agree that the ultimate settlement ought to, in addition, preserve the 10 founding principles of the "Bandung Conference" held in 1955 with specific stress on the settlement of all inter-regional disputes by nonviolent ways, for instance, conciliation, appeasement, negotiation or court settlement, along with other nonviolent means of the parties personal preference, in compliance with the "Charter of the United Nations;" and "respect for righteousness and global commitments."
4. Whichever innovative, out-of-the-box, nonviolent, fair and long-lasting resolution of the core issue of Kashmir has got to, have as a feature, five important factors:
1) Sincere interests of all concerned groups,
2) Constitutional rights and privileges of religious and racial minorities,
3) Evenhanded allocation of all kinds of resources, most notably water
4) Across -- the Board stability, along with
5) Regional Collaboration.
5. Both governments should show consideration for present treaties as this will be vital in creating assurance and obtaining a long-lasting solution. The "Indus Water Treaty" (IWT) endorsed by both India and Pakistan in 1960 allocated the three eastern waterways, Sutlej, Ravi along with Beas to India, and three western waterways, Jhelum, Indus, along with Chenab to Pakistan. This agreement gives a practical structure to grave and considerable dissimilarities over India's several water management ventures on waterways of Jhelum and Chenab.
6. Both governments should focus on continued frank dialogue between foreign Indians and Pakistanis residing in America, China and Russia as this should assist in bonding the present peace process to a collective vision, jointly approved standards, pensively recognized landmarks, and quantifiable results.
7. Both governments should focus on the development of democracy and strengthening of autonomous organizations right through South Asia to guarantee high-quality governance.
8. Both governments should focus on cultivating, promoting and advancing enhanced economic collaboration, cultural, social and intellectual interaction and people-to-people links throughout the region.
9. Both governments should focus on financing in the other country's infrastructure development programs relating to power, transportation, communications, and water management.
10. Both governments should focus on financing in exclusive funds and projects for poverty eradication, health, literacy as well as ecosystem management.
11. Both governments should focus on supporting shared dedication to value and maintain human rights of religious and racial minorities in line with the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights."
12. Both governments should focus on domestic along with international assistance, capability, and capital to grow, develop and maintain ground-breaking systems of justice and law enforcement to look after human rights and encourage regional collaboration.
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