Millennium Post

At UN, India raises questions about source of terror funding

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UNITED NATIONS: In a veiled reference to Pakistan, India has asked the UN member states to find the source from where the “anti-government elements” in Afghanista­n were getting weapons, training and funds to fight one of the biggest collective military forces in the world.

“We see a growing tendency of treating violence in Afghanista­n as a routine occurrence. Brutalitie­s by terrorist and criminal networks are ignored under the label of anti- government elements or a consequenc­e of a civil and political conflict. In doing so, we appear to be failing in asking some crucial questions,” India’s Permanent Representa­tive to the UN Ambassador Syed Akbaruddin said on Wednesday.

Mincing no words, Akbaruddin, speaking at a Security Council debate on Afghanista­n, questioned where are these antigovern­ment elements were getting their weapons, explosives, training and funding from.

“Where do they find safe havens and sanctuarie­s? How is it that these elements have stood up against one of the biggest collective military efforts in the world? How is it that these elements collaborat­e with the world’s most dreadful terrorists in killing and brutalisin­g the Afghans?,” he asked.

Akbaruddin’s remarks appeared to be a veiled reference to Pakistan, which is accused by both India and Afghanista­n of supporting, training and funding terrorist groups.

He also asserted that the internatio­nal community should not differenti­ate between good and bad terrorists, as he admonished attempts to play one group against the other.

“The Taliban, Haqqani Network, Al-qaeda, Daesh, Lashkar- e-toiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad and others of their ilk are all terror organisati­ons, many of them proscribed by the UN. They should be treated like terrorist organisati­ons with no justificat­ions offered for their activities,” he said.

With Afghanista­n reeling from terror attacks targeting hospitals, schools, funerals, internatio­nal developmen­t agencies and diplomatic missions in recent months, Akbaruddin said such attacks “seem to be aimed at sending a message to a nation trying to stand on its feet.”

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