Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

WATCH: India Demolishes Pakistan PM's Speech At UN, Calls It 'Terroristan'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Sep, 2017 12:10 PM
  • WATCH: India Demolishes Pakistan PM's Speech At UN, Calls It 'Terroristan'
In a sharp escalation of its attack, India slammed Pakistan at the UN for its support to terrorism, calling it "terroristan".
 
"In its short history, Pakistan has become a geography synonymous with terror," Eenam Gambhir, First Secretary in India's Permanent Mission to the UN, said on Thursday exercising India's right of reply after Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Abbasi's virulent attack that "the struggle" of the people in Kashmir was being "brutally suppressed by India".
 
 
Gambhir, who stole the show last year when she verbally pummelled former Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and delivered the memorable line: "The land of Taxila, one of the greatest learning centres of ancient times, is now host to the Ivy League of terrorism", packed equally powerful punches against Abbasi this year.
 
Pakistan's "contribution to the globalisation of terror is unparalleled", she declared.
 
"The quest for land of pure has actually produced a 'land of pure terror'.
 
 
 
 
"Pakistan is now 'Terroristan' with a flourishing industry producing and exporting global terrorism," Gambhir added.
 
In his speech, Abbasi warned of the possibility of a "dangerous escalation" in the subcontinent and clamoured for intervention by the global organisation.
 
Accusing New Delhi of frequently violating the ceasefire along the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir, he said that "if India does venture across the LoC, or acts upon its doctrine of 'limited' war against Pakistan, it will evoke a strong and matching response".
 
"The international community must act decisively to prevent the situation from a dangerous escalation," he said.
 
Abbasi also admitted that Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is directed against India.
 
"Confronted by a hostile and increasingly militarized neighbour, Pakistan has been obliged to maintain the capability for credible deterrence," he said. "Our strategic assets are vital to deter oft-threatened aggression."
 
Abbasi spent almost a third of his General Assembly address of about 12 minutes attacking India.
 
 
 
 
Abassi also accused India of war crimes over the use of pellet guns by law enforcement personnel and warned of a "dangerous escalation" on the subcontinent.
 
Lampooning Abbasi's claim of fighting terrorism, she said: "This is a country whose counter-terrorism policy is to mainstream and upstream terrorism by either providing safe haven to global terror leaders in it military towns or protecting them with political careers."
 
"It is extraordinary that the state which protected (former Al Qaeda leader) Osama bin Laden and sheltered Mullah Omar should have the gumption to play the victim. 
 
"By now all Pakistan's neighbours are painfully aware of these tactics of creating narratives based on distortions, deception and deceit," the diplomat said.
 
She also said that the current state of Pakistan could be gauged from the fact that Hafiz Saeed, leader of the UN-designated terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, was now seeking to be legitimised as a leader of a political party.
 
Stating that nothing can justify Pakistan's avaricious efforts to covet territories of its neighbours, Gambhir said: "In so far as India is concerned, Pakistan must understand that the state of Jammu and Kashmir is and will always remain an integral part of India. 
 
"However much it scales up cross-border terrorism, it will never succeed in undermining India's territorial integrity."
 
Ridiculing Pakistan for its complaints about the consequences it faced for its counter-terrorism efforts, she said: "Having diverted billions of dollars in international development aid towards creating a dangerous infrastructure of terror on its own territory Pakistan is now speaking of the high cost of its terror industry. 
 
"The polluter in this case is paying the price," she added. 
 
Gambhir got the backing of an Afghan diplomat, who spoke after her, also exercising his right of reply to Abbasi's allegations about terrorism coming to Islamabad from Kabul.
 
The Afghan diplomat asked where did Osama, Mullah Omar and his successor Mullah Akhtar Mansoor die, and answered they were locations in Pakistan.
 
"That was the country from which more than 20 international terrorist organisations came to Afghanistan and even Abbasi had admitted that those who carried out the May 31 bomb attack in Kabul that killed more than 150 people may have come from his country," he added.
 
None of the 112 other countries that have spoken so far in the annual high-level General Assembly debate has even mentioned the Kashmir issue, and last year none other than Pakistan did during the entire session.
 
Earlier on Thursday, Abbasi met Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. Pakistani media reported that he handed over to Guterres a dossier of "Indian atrocities in Kashmir".

MORE International ARTICLES

US Rolls Out Expedited Entry For Low-Risk Indian Travellers

US Rolls Out Expedited Entry For Low-Risk Indian Travellers
The US has started rolling out for India its Global Entry programme, which allows for expedited clearance of pre-approved, low-risk travellers.

US Rolls Out Expedited Entry For Low-Risk Indian Travellers

Inspired By Indian Television Show 'CID', Pak Boy Kills Sister Over Poor Handwriting Jibe

Inspired By Indian Television Show 'CID', Pak Boy Kills Sister Over Poor Handwriting Jibe
An 11-year-old boy in Pakistan, who was inspired by a popular Indian television series CID, has been arrested for allegedly killing his younger sister after she teased him for his poor handwriting.

Inspired By Indian Television Show 'CID', Pak Boy Kills Sister Over Poor Handwriting Jibe

Lord Swraj Paul Dedicates Caparo Plants In Honour Of His Late Son

Lord Swraj Paul Dedicates Caparo Plants In Honour Of His Late Son
Leading NRI industrialist Lord Swraj Paul has dedicated Caparo plants in India in honour of his late son Angad Paul.

Lord Swraj Paul Dedicates Caparo Plants In Honour Of His Late Son

Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students

Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students
Obaidur Rahman, a businessman who is also chairman of the Bihar foundation in Saudi Arabia, has formed an organization called Rahman 30, which will select 30 talented students from the minority community

Saudi-Based NRI Joins Hands With Super 30 To Help Talented Minority Students

Amarinder Singh Sanctions Rs 3.56 Lakh For Punjab Youth Stuck In Sharjah

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Saturday sanctioned Rs 3,56,700 from the Chief Minister's Relief Fund, on humanitarian grounds, to facilitate the return of a Gurdaspur resident from a ship he is stuck in at Sharjah Port.

Amarinder Singh Sanctions Rs 3.56 Lakh For Punjab Youth Stuck In Sharjah

15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach

15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach
A 15-year-old Indian girl has died of a heart attack while playing at the popular Half Moon beach in Al-Khobar city of Saudi Arabia.

15-Year-Old Indian Girl Dies Of Heart Attack On Saudi Arabia Beach