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Chitral, Gilgit- Shandur row
CHITRAL, 14 August 2007: A row over the
pastures on the 1200 ft high Shandur plateau, the borderland between
Gilgit and Chitral
has re erupted with claims and counter claims from both sides. The
latest position statement from Ghizri people on the the Gilgit side
as published in a national daily is produced below.
GILGIT: Chitral’s claim over Shandur
refuted
Dawn
GILGIT, Aug 13: People of Ghizer district in the Northern Areas have
refuted the claims of Chitral and have said that historically as
well as at present the meadows of Shandur remain an integral part of
their district.
Sarfaraz Khan, a former member of the Northern Areas Legislative
Council, told Dawn that the documents of the British Raj were ample
proof of the demarcation of the Shandur area as a boundary between
Ghizer and Chitral, wherein the watershed of Shandur Lake had been
declared the line separating Chitral and Ghizer districts.
He said the sanctity of the Shandur Lake and its watershed should be
honoured to avoid clashes while the Langar pastures were already
15kms inside the boundaries of his district.
“Over time the Chitral administration and some officials from the
NWFP based in Gilgit attempted to tamper with the documents on the
ownership of Shandur but all historical facts negate this contrived
scheme of fudged demarcation,” Mr Sarfaraz added.
He claimed that Ghizer was part of the Gilgit Agency during the
British Raj and in 1936 the then British political agent of Gilgit
Agency Mr Kolf constructed the Shandur Polo Ground to play polo
during moonlit nights because this land was part of the Gilgit
Agency and Ghizer.
The former NALC member said due to this reason they had been
managing the land since the British era and vowed that all purported
encroachments and expansionist designs would be thwarted.
When asked about a recent dispute between the people of Chitral and
Ghizer districts over the ownership of a pasture near the Shandur
polo ground, he said that they were not ready to surrender their
ownership over land that genuinely belonged to them for the past 80
years.
As far as the grazing rights were concerned, he said there had been
mutual understanding between the elders of Ghizer and Chitral that
they would allow cattle from both sides to graze wherever they
wanted to.
He said that was why the people of Laspur (Chitral) had been grazing
their cattle in Shandur for many years and similarly the people from
Phander (Ghizer) had been grazing their cattle in Laspur (Chitral),
which should not give credence to ownership claims.
He said he would file a petition in the Supreme Court if the issue
was allowed to linger on by the ministry of states and frontier
regions (Safron) and the ministry of interior for arbitration with
which the settlement of the dispute had remained pending since 2001.
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