• Monday, April 29, 2024

Diplomacy

‘Will enter Pakistan to kill terrorists’: Islamabad slams India defence minister’s remark

Rajnath Singh’s comments on April 5 came after the Guardian newspaper published a report stating the Indian government had killed about 20 people in Pakistan since 2020.

FILE PHOTO: Rajnath Singh arrives for the 10th Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Defense Ministers Meeting – Plus in Jakarta, Indonesia, November 16, 2023. BAGUS INDAHONO/Pool via REUTERS

By: Pramod Thomas

PAKISTAN has denounced “provocative remarks” made by Indian defence minister Rajnath Singh in which he said India would enter Pakistan to kill anyone who escapes over its border after trying to carry out militant attacks.

Singh’s comments on Friday (5) came after the Guardian newspaper published a report stating the Indian government had killed about 20 people in Pakistan since 2020 as part of a broader plan to target “terrorists residing on foreign soil”.

“If they run away to Pakistan, we will enter Pakistan to kill them,” Singh told the channel in response to a question about the report.

“India always wants to maintain good relations with its neighbouring countries … But if anyone shows India the angry eyes again and again, comes to India and tries to promote terrorist activities, we will not spare them,” Singh said.

Pakistan’s ministry of foreign affairs said in a statement, “India’s assertion of its preparedness to extra-judicially execute more civilians, arbitrarily pronounced as ‘terrorists’, inside Pakistan constitutes a clear admission of culpability.”

Relations between India and Pakistan have worsened since a 2019 suicide bombing of an Indian military convoy in Kashmir was traced to Pakistan-based militants and prompted New Delhi to carry out an airstrike on what it said was a militant base in Pakistan.

Pakistan said earlier this year it had credible evidence linking Indian agents to the killing of two of its citizens on its soil.

India said it was “false and malicious” propaganda.

Canada and the US last year accused India of killing or attempting to kill people in those countries.

Canada said in September that it was pursuing “credible allegations” linking India to the death of a Sikh separatist leader shot dead in June – claims that India said were “absurd and motivated”.

A top Canadian official said in January that India was cooperating in the matter and bilateral ties were improving.

US similarly said in November that it had thwarted an Indian plot to kill a Sikh separatist leader and announced charges against a person it said had worked with India to orchestrate the attempted murder.

Prime minister Narendra Modi has said India will investigate any information it receives on the matter.

(Reuters)

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