India says biggest sponsor of cross-border terrorism 'masquerading' as victim
India hit out at Pakistan
for its litany of lies at the United Nations after Islamabad's UN envoy
claimed to have given a statement in a Security Council meeting not open
to non-Council members and said that the biggest sponsor of
cross-border terrorism against it now tries to "masquerade" itself as a
victim of terror.
Calling out Pakistan's lie that it has been a
target of cross-border terrorism for decades, India said "a lie repeated
a hundred times will not become truth. The biggest sponsor of
cross-border terrorism against India now tries to masquerade itself as a
victim of terrorism by India," India's Permanent Mission to the UN said
on Monday.
The Pakistan Mission falsely claimed that its UN
envoy Munir Akram gave a statement at a Security Council debate on
Report of the Secretary General on Threats to International Peace and
Security posed by Terrorism Actions.
However,
the Security Council meeting on threats to international peace and
security was not open to non-members of the Council. A photograph of the
meeting tweeted by the German Mission to the UN showed only envoys of
the 15 Security Council members participating in the meeting. Pakistan
is not a member of the Council.
"We fail to comprehend where
exactly did the Permanent Representative of Pakistan make his statement
since the Security Council session today was not open to non-members of
the Security Council. Be that as it may, the five big lies of Pakistan
lies exposed," India's Mission to the UN said in a post on Twitter.
On
Akram's claim that Pakistan has decimated Al-Qaeda from the region,
India said perhaps the Permanent Representative of Pakistan is "not
aware that Osama bin Laden was hiding in their own country in plain
sight, and it is the US forces which got him inside Pakistan. Nor have
they heard their Prime Minister refer to Osama bin Laden as a martyr."
Giving
a strong rebuttal to Pakistan's lies, New Delhi termed Pakistan's claim
that India has hired terrorists as mercenaries to hit them as
"laughable".
"Coming from a country which is a known sponsor of
cross-border terrorism which has made the world suffer due to its
actions, this claim is nothing short of being preposterous!", India
said.
India also said that Pakistan is home to the largest number
of terrorists proscribed by the UN and many of the sanctioned
terrorists and entities continue to operate with impunity inside
Pakistan. Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan himself had admitted at
the General Assembly last year about the presence of 40,000-50,000
terrorists inside Pakistan.
Laying bare another lie by Pakistan
about Indian nationals in the 1267 Al Qaeda Sanctions List of the UN
Security Council, India said the Sanctions List is "public and the world
can see none of these individuals are in it.
The 1267 Committee
works on the basis of evidence and not random accusations thrown in to
divert their time and attention," India said in response to a lie made
by Pakistan that it has submitted names of some Indians to be proscribed
under the Sanctions List.
In a strong response to Islamabad
raking up the issue of Jammu and Kashmir in the remarks it falsely said
Akram gave to the Council, India said Pakistan makes "ridiculous
assertions" about internal affairs of India.
"This is a country
whose minority population has dropped drastically from 1947 to what it
is today, which is just about 3 per cent, which is nothing short of
systemic cleansing. This is in addition to false allegations about
India's sovereign actions in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir,
which are for the welfare of the people."
Pakistan consistently
rakes up the issue of Jammu and Kashmir and other internal matters of
India at various UN fora in its bid to internationalise the issue but
has repeatedly failed to get any support from the broader UN membership
for its agenda.
Pakistani nationals remain at leadership levels
in terror groups such as Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent, Islamic
State in Iraq and the Levant - Khorasan (ISIL-K) as well as Tehrik-e
Taliban Pakistan, the 26th report of the Analytical Support and
Sanctions Monitoring Team concerning ISIL (Da'esh), Al-Qaida and
associated individuals and entities has shown.
The report had
also said that an estimated 6000-6500 Pakistani foreign terrorist
fighters are in Afghanistan, most of them with Tehrik-e Taliban
Pakistan, "posing a threat to both countries."
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