Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Rajnath talks tough, says Pak not mending its ways

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

PLAIN SPEAK Govt won’t ask forces on how they chose to retaliate, says home minister

NEWDELHI: Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Tuesday Pakistan was not “mending its ways”, adding that Indian border forces were giving befitting replies to repeated incidents of unprovoked firing by the neighbour. He said the government will never seek answers from Indian forces on “how they chose to retaliate” to ceasefire violations along the border.

“This (Pakistan’s acts) can be a subject of research and these activities of the neighbour are hard to understand,” Singh said in his keynote speech at the Border Security Forces’ 16th investitur­e ceremony in New Delhi.

New Delhi had on May 16 announced a halting of operations against militants in J&K during Ramzan to help observe the holy month in a peaceful environmen­t. Singh said that while the government had directed the BSF and army to never fire the first bullet, “no one will ask them how they chose to retaliate”.

“If you (the BSF) are fired upon, then you have to decide what is the best course of reaction or action. You have done this with remarkable responsibi­lity in the past,” the home minister said.

Jammu and Kashmir has witnessed a spurt in Pakistani shelling and firing along the Internatio­nal Border and the Line of Control this year, with more than 700 incidents leaving 39 people — 18 of them security personnel — dead. Singh said India was a peace-loving nation and wanted cordial relations with all countries, including its neighbours. He also spoke about the government’s ambitious plan to completely seal its borders with Pakistan and Bangladesh using gadgets and ‘smart fences’. “In a few months, the work should get completed,” he said. He said the BSF was the ”first wall of defence” on the borders and the troops had ensured that the Indian frontiers were safe under them.

 ?? NITIN KANOTRA/HT ?? A woman prepares food as she takes shelter with her family in a government school during firing from the Pakistan side of the border in Jora village of Jammu on Tuesday.
NITIN KANOTRA/HT A woman prepares food as she takes shelter with her family in a government school during firing from the Pakistan side of the border in Jora village of Jammu on Tuesday.

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