ISLAMABAD/NEW YORK – Pakistan has rejected India’s “unwarranted assertions” made in the UN General Assembly about the recent fire incident in a Hindu temple in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
Exercising his right of reply in General Assembly in New York, Pakistani delegate Zulqarnain Chheena said that this is not the first time India has tried to feign concern for minority rights elsewhere while being the most egregious and persistent violator of minority rights itself.
The Pakistan delegate said the blatant acts of discrimination against Muslims and other minorities in India take place with state complicity.
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India’s delegate Aishish Sharma, who spoke after the 193-member Assembly adopted a resolution on the protection of religious sites, claimed that the Karak authorities “stood idly by” while the temple burned.
In his response, the Pakistan delegate said, “The clear difference between India and Pakistan in respect of minority rights can be gauged from the fact that the accused in the Karak incident were immediately arrested, orders were issued for repair of the temple, the highest level of judiciary took immediate notice, and senior political leadership condemned the incident.
“Whereas, in India, the blatant acts of discrimination against Muslims and other minorities take place with state complicity.” he added.
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In this regard, Chheena cited the discriminatory Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), National Register of Citizens (NRC); the 2002 Gujarat massacre, the 2020 Delhi pogrom; the 1992 demolition of Babri Mosque and acquittal of the accused by Indian court in 2020; blaming Muslims for spreading coronavirus; raising the bogey of ‘love jehad’; cow vigilantism and terming West Bengal Muslims ‘termites’; extra-judicial killings of innocent Kashmiris to blatant attempts to turn Muslims into a minority in Kashmir.
“The RSS-BJP regime’s record is replete with instances of gross and systemic violations of the rights of minorities, in particular Muslims,” the Pakistani delegate said.
“The Indian leadership is yet to condemn the perpetrators of the Delhi massacre in February 2020, let alone bring those criminals to justice.” “As a perennial purveyor of state-sponsored discrimination against its minorities, India is in no position to pontificate on the issue of minority rights elsewhere”, Chheena told the Assembly.