New Delhi - Irna
India said it has taken \'due note\' of the UK Parliament discussing the issue of human rights in Jammu and Kashmir and said there were effective mechanisms within its democratic framework to address any grievance or any aberration.\'We take due note of the....debate in the UK House of Commons...., which we believe is an initiative of back-bencher MPs and does not reflect the position of the UK government. Our views in the matter are known to the UK. Suffice it to say at this juncture that India has a vibrant democracy which fully respects rule of law and human rights,\' Official Spokesperson in the Ministry of External Affairs Vishnu Prakash said in New Delhi on Thursday. \'Civil liberties and freedoms are enshrined in the Constitution of India as fundamental rights and are exercised by each and every citizen of this country of 1.2 billion people,\' he said \'Should there be any aberration, there are enough mechanisms, effective mechanisms within our system, democratic framework to address any grievance or any aberration,\' pti reported quoting government sources as saying here. A demand for resolving the Jammu and Kashmir issue through self-determination by the Kashmiris was made in the British Parliament on Friday even as India asserted that there were effective mechanisms within its democratic framework to address any grievance. Initiating a general debate in the House of Commons on human rights in the Indian sub-continent, Steve Baker, Conservative MP, demanded that an international commission should investigate alleged human rights violations in Kashmir.