India slams Pak PM , Accuses Islamabad of Terrorism, Human Rights Violations at UNGA

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North News

New Delhi, September 28

Bhavika Mangalanandan, First Secretary of the Permanent Mission of India to the United Nations, fiercely criticized Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif at the UN General Assembly today. Responding to Sharif’s earlier remarks, during a Right of Reply session. Mangalanandan condemned Pakistan’s attempts to attack India, labeling it a military-run state notorious for its involvement in terrorism, the narcotics trade, and transnational crime. “A country with such a global reputation has the audacity to criticize the world’s largest democracy,” she said.

Mangalanandan went on to accuse Pakistan of persistently interfering in India’s internal affairs, particularly Jammu and Kashmir. “The truth is, Pakistan covets our territory and has continually used terrorism to disrupt elections in Jammu and Kashmir, an inalienable and integral part of India,” she emphasized.

Highlighting Islamabad’s poor human rights record, she called it “ridiculous” that a nation responsible for the 1971 genocide and ongoing persecution of minorities would dare speak on intolerance. “A country that hosted Osama bin Laden, with a trail of involvement in global terrorism, stands unqualified to lecture on these matters,” she said.

Mangalanandan concluded by stating that Pakistan’s Prime Minister’s statements were “unacceptable to all of us” and underscored the importance of rejecting such rhetoric in the UN.

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India Slams Pakistan PM at UNGA, Accuses Islamabad of Terrorism and Human Rights Violations

India slams Pakistan over Kashmir statement at UN

North News

New Delhi, September 28

Bhavika Mangalanandan, First Secretary of the Permanent Mission of India to the United Nations, fiercely criticized Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif at the UN General Assembly today, during a Right of Reply session. Responding to Sharif’s earlier remarks, Mangalanandan condemned Pakistan’s attempts to attack India, labeling it a military-run state notorious for its involvement in terrorism, the narcotics trade, and transnational crime. “A country with such a global reputation has the audacity to criticize the world’s largest democracy,” she said.

Mangalanandan went on to accuse Pakistan of persistently interfering in India’s internal affairs, particularly Jammu and Kashmir. “The truth is, Pakistan covets our territory and has continually used terrorism to disrupt elections in Jammu and Kashmir, an inalienable and integral part of India,” she emphasized.

Highlighting Islamabad’s poor human rights record, she called it “ridiculous” that a nation responsible for the 1971 genocide and ongoing persecution of minorities would dare speak on intolerance. “A country that hosted Osama bin Laden, with a trail of involvement in global terrorism, stands unqualified to lecture on these matters,” she said.

Mangalanandan concluded by stating that Pakistan’s Prime Minister’s statements were “unacceptable to all of us” and underscored the importance of rejecting such rhetoric in the UN.