New Delhi: India, which attacked Pakistan at the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC), said Thursday that Islamabad continues to play the “victim card” on the terrorism issue to “distract the international community”, even while still supporting them. .
Noting that Pakistan continues its “run with the hare and hunt with the hound scam,” India’s first secretary to the United Nations in Geneva, Vimarsh Aryan said: “Whenever there is a discussion about terrorism, the failed state Pakistan acts as a victim card to distract the attention of the international community from the reality that Pakistan hosts and blatantly supports terrorists and terrorist organizations banned by the UN. “
Fact by fact, and case by case, Aryan exposed the condition of minorities, women, children and journalists in the country. He said that “the draconian state of Pakistan dares to speak out about minority rights in egalitarian India without realizing that its responsibility is to protect the people,” citing the example of Asif Pervaiz, a Christian from Lahore who recently was sentenced to death by Pakistan’s draconian blasphemy laws.
On women’s rights, giving an example of Parsha Kumari, a Hindu woman who was kidnapped and converted in the southern province of Sindh, the Indian diplomat said, “The barbarian state of Pakistan dares to speak out about women’s rights in an inclusive democracy like India without realizing that their responsibility is to protect women. “
Speaking on the rights of the child, he cited an example from three-year-old Shahid Shah, against whom FIR appeared in Gujranwala. Aryan said, “The ruthless state of Pakistan dares to speak out about children’s rights in a progressive democracy like India without realizing that its responsibility is to protect children.”
Regarding the situation of journalists, he noted the “deep state of Pakistan” that “dares to speak of the rights of journalists in an open democracy like India” and without “realizing that their responsibility is to protect to honest journalists like Bilal. ” Farooqi, who is being tortured by the Pakistani army in Karachi, as we speak. “
On September 30, India highlighted Pakistan’s hate speech against Indian leaders and the situation of minorities in the country at the United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC). India’s first secretary to the United Nations in Geneva, Pawan Badhe, had said: “We are not surprised that Pakistan is doing well when it comes to inciting hatred against religious minorities and attacking our leadership with hate speech.” .
Badhe had added: “It is well appreciated that an inherited culture of hatred makes him the perfect candidate to carry forward the legacy of intolerance against anyone with modern views on human rights.”
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan and other members of the ruling Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) have been commenting on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and India. In fact, the Pakistani prime minister mentioned India 20 times during his speech at the United Nations General Assembly last week.
The Indian diplomat had said that “no invented word against India is going to change the fact that Pakistan and the territories under its control are death traps for journalists, human rights defenders, social activists and religious and ethnic minorities.”
He had explained: “Pakistan’s perennial attack on India project in the UN system is also not going to change the fact that hundreds of journalists and human rights defenders are killed every year in Pakistan due to systematic killings, including extrajudicial ones. Incessant attempts to smear India in all international forums are not going to change the fact that tens of thousands of minorities would not stop fleeing Pakistan. “
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A number of reports of conversion of Hindu and Sikh minority girls have been reported in the country. The recent kidnapping and conversion of Jagjit Kaur to Ayesha Bibi has been dominating the news on both sides of the border with a number of Sikh groups protesting against him near the Pakistan High Commission in India’s national capital, Delhi.
Badhe noted that “while the world has progressed well, Pakistan is still at a crossroads in understanding the real meaning of modern laws, democracy and human rights” and “the language of accountability, civic space, fundamental freedoms and public participation have yet to find resonance with the Pakistani authorities. “
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