
External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar said on Saturday that since Independence, India has confronted the challenge of "having a neighbour that is an epicentre of global terrorism". Addressing the 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly, he said that major international terrorist attacks are traced back to "that one country" for decades now, referring to Pakistan.
"The most recent example of cross-border barbarism was the murder of innocent tourists in Pahalgam in April this year," said Jaishankar, adding: "India exercised its right to defend its people against terrorism and brought its organisers and perpetrators to justice."
He was referring to India's Operation Sindoor earlier this year when the Indian Armed Forces targeted and destroyed terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir with precision, in connection with a terror attack near Pahalgam in J&K that killed 26 civilians.
Earlier on Saturday, Petal Gahlot, First Secretary at India's Permanent Mission to the United Nations, delivered a strong rebuttal after Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif accused India of "unprovoked aggression" during his speech at the assembly. Read more
"No degree of drama and no level of lies can conceal the facts," said the Indian diplomat, opening her three and a half minutes-long speech by describing the Pakistan leader's address as "absurd theatrics".
She also said that Sharif "once again glorified terrorism that is so central to their (Pakistan's) foreign policy".
"This is the very same Pakistan which, at the UN Security Council on 25 April 2025, shielded ‘The Resistance Front’, a Pakistani sponsored terror outfit, from the responsibility of carrying out the barbaric massacre of tourists in the Indian Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir," Gahlot said.