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The Karachi Agreement of 1949 was signed by the military representatives of India and Pakistan, supervised by the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan, establishing a cease-fire line in Kashmir following the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947. [1]
The Karachi Agreement is reported to have been signed on 28 April 1949 by: Mushtaq Ahmed Gurmani, Pakistan's `Minister without Portfolio', in charge of the Ministry of Kashmir Affairs; Sardar Mohammed Ibrahim Khan, the president of Azad Kashmir; Chaudhry Ghulam Abbas, Head of All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference
India and Pakistan signed the Karachi Agreement in July 1949 and established a ceasefire line to be supervised by observers. [54] [55] The first group of these unarmed observers arrived in the mission area in January 1949 to oversee the ceasefire between India and Pakistan. [56]
India and Pakistan signed the Karachi Agreement in July 1949 and established a ceasefire line to be supervised by observers. After the termination of the UNCIP , the Security Council passed Resolution 91 (1951) and established a United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) to observe and report violations of ceasefire .
The 1949 Karachi Agreement and 1972 Simla Agreement did not clearly mention who controlled the glacier, merely stating that the Cease Fire Line (CFL) terminated at NJ9842. [20] UN officials presumed there would be no dispute between India and Pakistan over such a cold and barren region. [21] [page needed]
The Karachi Agreement of 1949 created the Line of Control between India and Pakistan, but this line ended at a location called Khor in Nubra.The only additional relevant text for the Saltoro – Siachen area in either the 1949 or the superseding 1972 Simla Agreement was "thence north to the glaciers."
This agreement was termed as 'Karachi Agreement' and a ceasefire was effected in Kashmir on 1 January 1949. It was decided that a free and impartial plebiscite would be held under the supervision of the UN. [90] In 1948, Jinnah died, [91] and a major problem of religious
The 1949 Ceasefire Line can refer to: The ceasefire lines drawn between Israel and its four neighbors by the 1949 Armistice Agreements The ceasefire line drawn between India and Pakistan in Kashmir by the Karachi Agreement