Home Global News ‘Pakistan is Terroristan’: India Gives a Befitting Reply to Pak at UN

‘Pakistan is Terroristan’: India Gives a Befitting Reply to Pak at UN

Eenam Gambhir, First Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to the UN with India's permanent representative at the United Nations Syed Akbaruddin.
Eenam Gambhir, First Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to the UN with India's permanent representative at the United Nations Syed Akbaruddin.
Eenam Gambhir, First Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to the UN with India's permanent representative at the United Nations Syed Akbaruddin.
Eenam Gambhir, First Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to the UN with India’s permanent representative at the United Nations Syed Akbaruddin.

Launching a scathing attack on Pakistan India today has described it as “terroristan” and a land of “pure terror.”

India has responded angrily to a speech by Pakistan’s prime minister in which he accused India of “war crimes” in the disputed Kashmir region and of “exporting terror” to Pakistan.

Speaking on this issue at the UN General Assembly, India’s representative said it is extraordinary that the state which protected Osama Bin Laden and sheltered Mullah Omar has the audacity to play the victim.

India was exercising its right to reply after Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi raked up the Kashmir issue at the General Assembly.

“By now, all Pakistan’s neighbors are painfully familiar with these tactics to create a narrative based on distortions, deception and deceit,” Eenam Gambhir, a First Secretary in the Permanent Mission of India to the UN, said, asserting that efforts at creating alternative facts do not change reality.

“In its short history, Pakistan has become a geography synonymous with terror,” she said.

Playing on the country’s name, which means “land of pure,” she said the quest for a land of pure has actually produced ‘the land of pure terror’. Pakistan is now ‘Terroristan’, with a flourishing industry producing and exporting global terrorism,” she said.

Pakistan is now Terroristan
Pakistan is now Terroristan

Gambhir noted that Pakistan’s current state can be gauged from the fact that Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, a leader of Lashkar-e- Taiba, is now seeking legitimacy through his party which is all set to contest elections.

She said that Pakistan’s counter-terrorism policy is to mainstream and upstream terrorists by either providing safe havens to global terror leaders in its military towns, or protecting them with “political careers”.

“The state of Jammu and Kashmir is and will always remain an integral part of lndia. However much it scales up cross- border terrorism, it will never succeed in undermining India’s territorial integrity,” she said.

Earlier, Abbasi accused India of indulging in terror activities against his country and warned of a “matching response” if it “ventures across the LoC” or acts upon its “doctrine of limited war against Pakistan.”

He urged the United Nations to appoint a special envoy to Kashmir, claiming that the struggle of the people in the region is being “brutally suppressed” by India.

“Having suffered and sacrificed so much due to our role in the global counter terrorism campaign, it is especially galling for Pakistan to be blamed for the military or political stalemate in Afghanistan,” Abbasi said.

Attacking Pakistan, Gambhir said having diverted billions of dollars in international military and development aid towards creating a “dangerous infrastructure of terror” on its own territory, Pakistan is now speaking of the high cost of its terror industry.

“The polluter, in this case, is paying the price,” she said.

“Even as terrorists thrive in Pakistan and roam its streets with impunity, we have heard it lecture about the protection of human rights in India. The world does not need lessons on democracy and human rights from a country whose own situation is charitably described as a failed state,” Gambhir said.

“Terroristan is in fact a territory whose contribution to the globalization of terror is unparalleled. Pakistan can only be counseled to abandon a destructive worldview that has caused grief to the entire world. If it could be persuaded to demonstrate any commitment to civilization, order, and to peace, it may still find some acceptance in the comity of nations,” she said.