This point was driven home by delegates drawn from every major region of thewider pre-1947 Jammu & Kashmir state – including Gilgit-Baltistan, ‘Azad’Jammu & Kashmir, and the Leh-Ladakh region – in another, relativelylow-profile Conference held at Manesar near Delhi on May 18 and 19, under theaegis of the Institute for Conflict Management (ICM), just days before theSrinagar Round Table. The unanimously passed Resolutions of the ICM Conferencerejected a wide range of elements that are currently embedded in the discourseon the ‘Kashmir issue’, including the role of violence and terrorism,isolationism, communal, ethnic or regional exclusionism and ghettoisation aselements of, or pressures towards, a ‘solution’; they rejected, equally, anyresolution based on "a mere political redistribution of power between regionalor factional elites". This Conference sought, instead, a just,non-discriminatory and integrative solution based on democratic norms, clearrepresentation of all constituencies in the region, and the protection of allcivil and political rights within the framework of a Constitutional Democracy.