Engagement & Impact

Our Programmes

Programme · Since 1988

ASR's Programme in Azad Jammu & Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan

Since 1988, the Kashmir conflict has caused thousands of civilian deaths and widespread displacement. Women and girls have been disproportionately affected due to their status in society.

Impact on Women

Women and girls bore a disproportionate burden.

Due to their status in society, women faced compounded consequences — from direct physical violence to social, legal, and economic exclusion — that mainstream peace processes entirely ignored.

Gap in Peace Processes

Women's voices were absent from negotiations.

Women’s experiences remained largely silent in national and international discussions. No formal mechanisms existed for their participation in peace negotiations or post-conflict decision-making.

The structural gaps ASR identified

No Voice

Silent in national discussions

Women's experiences of rape, displacement, and widowhood were not recorded or presented in any national or international forum on Kashmir.

No Mechanisms

Excluded from negotiations

No formal structures existed for women's participation in peace negotiations or post-conflict decision-making at any level.

The Divide

Separated by the LOC

The Line of Control physically separated Kashmiri women on both sides, preventing solidarity and a unified voice for peace.

Policy Failure

Rights violations unaddressed

Neither Pakistan nor India had created policy frameworks to specifically address human rights violations against women in the conflict zone.

ASR's Response

Mainstreaming women in peacebuilding.

ASR launched a programme built on four interconnected strategies — each designed to address a specific dimension of women’s exclusion from the peace process.

01

Creating forums for documentation and strategy

Creating forums for Kashmiri women to document experiences and develop common strategies — transforming personal testimony into shared evidence for advocacy.

02

Linking women across the Line of Control

Linking women across the LOC to build a unified voice — bridging the physical and political divide between Kashmiri women on both sides of the border.

03

Advocating for policy change in Pakistan and India

Advocating for policy change in both countries to end rights violations — including direct engagement with governments, security forces, and High Commissions.

04

Building women's capacity for participation

Building women’s capacity to participate in government and peace processes — equipping them to move from victims to active agents in conflict resolution.

Activities

On the ground across AJK and Gilgit-Baltistan.

23 focus group discussions across AJK and FANA

Landmine Advocacy

ASR raised the landmine issue with the Pakistani Rangers and the Indian Border Police and sent formal letters to them and to the High Commissions of both countries — highlighting the devastating impact on civilian women living near the Line of Control.

Conclusion

A precondition for legitimate and lasting peace.

ASR’s programme positioned women’s agency not as a peripheral concern — but as a fundamental precondition for any conflict resolution process that could claim legitimacy or durability.

"Sustainable peace in Kashmir requires acknowledging women's agency and integrating their experiences into policy and negotiations."

What meaningful peace requires

ASR's Core Position

Acknowledging women’s agency and integrating their experiences into policy and negotiations is not optional — it is a precondition for legitimate and lasting conflict resolution in Kashmir.

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