A group of 30 doctors and paramedical staff representing Jamaat-ud-Dawah, a terror outfit headed by Mumbai attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed, will apply for Indian visas on Tuesday to treat and provide medicines to the injured in Kashmir.
"A team of 30 doctors and paramedical staff of 'Muslim Medical Mission' (of the Jamaat-ud-Dawah) will apply for Indian visa on Tuesday in order to reach Kashmir where they could treat the people injured in clashes with the Indian Army. Eye specialists are part of the team who will treat many people suffering from eye injuries there," Ahmed Nadeem, an official of the JuD, said.
Asked about how the Indian embassy in Islamabad would entertain the JuD medical team's request in the current circumstances, Nadeem said the Muslim Medical Mission would request the Pakistani government for help in this regard.
Meanwhile, the mission's president Prof Dr Zafar Iqbal Chaudhry said if the Indian government does not allow its medical team to travel to Srinagar to treat the injured Kashmiris it would hold demonstrations against it.
Chaudhry claimed that it is "our duty to reach out to the injured Kashmiris for their treatment as the Indian government is not fully providing treatment to the injured".
"A three-member Indian doctors team returned from Srinagar without treating the injured," he alleged.
Some 40 religious parties under the banner Defa-e-Pakistan Council will hold a march from Lahore to Wagah border on July 31 to protest against India over violence in Kashmir. JuD is the main party in the DPC.
Photograph: Umar Ganie/Rediff.com
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