Tableaus, speech contests held to mark Kashmir Solidarity Day

Published
Students present a tableau on the occasion of Kashmir Solidarity Day at Punjab Arts Council in Rawalpindi on Tuesday. — White Star
Students present a tableau on the occasion of Kashmir Solidarity Day at Punjab Arts Council in Rawalpindi on Tuesday. — White Star

RAWALPINDI: The Rawalpindi Arts Council in collaboration with All Pakistan Private School Management Association (APPSMA) organised tableaus, Kashmiri songs and speech competitions on Tuesday to express solidarity with the Kashmiri people and to pay tributes to their struggle for freedom.

PML-N MPA Riffat Abbasi was the chief guest while director Arts Council Sajjad Hussain and former director Waqar Ahmed were also present on the occasion.

Addressing the participants, Riffat Abbasi stated that Kashmir Solidarity Day was not just a ceremonial occasion but a part of the longstanding struggle that began in 1947 during the partition of the subcontinent.

She highlighted that this struggle was backed by the sacrifices of millions of Kashmiris who had shown unwavering determination in their fight for self-determination. She further explained that when the partition of the subcontinent was announced, all Muslim-majority regions were to become part of Pakistan based on the ideology of Pakistan.

However, she said that Kashmir was forcibly annexed by India through a malicious conspiracy and India continued to deny this fundamental right through its intransigence and oppression.

Former director of Arts Council Waqar Ahmed spoke on the continuous cycle of violence and oppression in occupied Kashmir. He pointed out that innocent Kashmiris were being martyred daily, women were subjected to sexual violence as a weapon of war, young men were forcibly disappeared and children were blinded by pellet guns.

Director Arts Council Sajjad Hussain reiterated that Pakistan would always extend political, moral and diplomatic support to the Kashmiri people, and assured them that they were not alone in their struggle, as the entire Pakistani nation stood with them.

Meanwhile, AIMS Education secured first position, Falcon Schooling System came second and Uzma Model Secondary School took third position in the tableau competition.

In the Kashmiri song competition, Ayesha Daniyal secured first position, Saima Noor stood second and Zara Shoukat took third place. Ahmed Mujtaba from Uzma Model School secured first position, Maryam Bibi from Bright Land School came second while Aiza Butt from AIMS School stood third in the speech competition. Prizes were distributed among the winners of the competition at the end of the event.

Published in Dawn, February 5th, 2025

Opinion

Editorial

Islamic banking
Updated 06 Jul, 2026

Islamic banking

THE roadmap for eliminating riba from Pakistan’s financial system from 2028 offers some clarity on how the...
Prison reforms
06 Jul, 2026

Prison reforms

IF nothing else, it was good to see the four provincial chief executives sharing a common platform. The chief...
Preserving Taxila
06 Jul, 2026

Preserving Taxila

TAXILA is far more than a collection of ancient ruins. It is one of South Asia’s greatest archaeological ...
Iran’s resilience
Updated 05 Jul, 2026

Iran’s resilience

THE funeral ceremonies for Iran’s assassinated supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his family members, which...
The annual test
05 Jul, 2026

The annual test

PAKISTAN enters another monsoon season with little room for complacency. Last year’s rains claimed more than 1,000...
Dangerous syringes
05 Jul, 2026

Dangerous syringes

INNOCENCE stands overwhelmed by another health emergency. The HIV crisis, beyond surging statistics — over 350,000...