Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Pak, India spar over terror tag at UN meet

Pak’s permanent representa­tive to UN hits back, calls India mother of terrorism in South Asia, rakes up Kashmir

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com (With agency inputs)

NEWDELHI: India is the mother of terrorism in South Asia and “a racist and fascist ideology is firmly embedded” in the Modi government, Pakistan has said in response to external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj’s speech at UN.

India sponsored and aided terrorism against all its neighbours, reports in the Pakistani media quoted its permanent representa­tive to UN, Maleeha Lodhi, as saying.

Addressing the UN general assembly on Saturday, Swaraj tore into the neighbouri­ng country, calling Pakistan a “pre-eminent exporter of terror”.

Earlier this week, Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi in his address had accused India of supporting terrorism and human rights violations in Kashmir.

Swaraj hit back, saying while India was giving the world topnotch doctors and engineers Pakistan was producing terrorists.

Lodhi attacked the BJP and raked up Kashmir once again.

New Delhi’s “current political luminaries belong to a political organisati­on that has the blood of thousands of Muslims of Gujarat on their hands ”, Lod hi said, refer- ring to the 2002 Gujarat riots.

India was ruled by a fascist ideology and it should stop supporting across-the-border terrorism, she said exercising Pakistan’s right to reply at the UN.

The leadership of the BJP government was “drawn from the RSS (Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh) that is accused of assassinat­ing Mahatma Gandhi”.

Lod hi also invoked A ru nd ha ti Roy to attack S war aj’ s speech and quoted the acclaimed Indian novelist’s 2015 statement :“These horrific murders are only a symptom. Life is hell for the living too. Whole population­s of Dal its, Ad ivasis, Muslims, and Christians are being forced to live in terror,

unsure of when and from where the assault would come.”

Pakistan was open to resuming a comprehens­ive dialogue with India but it should include Kashmir, Lod hi said as she waved a picture of a woman whose face was scarred, with what looked like pellet-gun wounds.

Use of pellet guns that has left several young Kashmiris completely or partially blinded is an emotive issue, with security forces under pressure to look for alternativ­e ways to control crowds.

The UN general assembly for years has been a battlefiel­d for India and Pakistan, where Kashmir has figured prominent ly.

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