It was time for some plain speaking as India’s Foreign Secretary S. Jaishankar summoned Pakistan’s High Commissioner Abdul Basit and conveyed that India has enough evidence to link Pakistani militants with the recent terror attack in Uri that killed 18 Indian soldiers.
The message was direct and sliced through duplicity and denials that have become hallmarks of Pakistan’s response in the aftermath of terror attacks in India, engineered by Pakistan-based militants, in collusion with sections of the state machinery.
Honour the pledge: Stop supporting terror in India
The latest terrorist attack in Uri only underlines that the infrastructure of terrorism in Pakistan remains active, India’s external affairs ministry said after the meeting between Mr Jaishankar and the Pakistani envoy in New Delhi on September 21. “We demand that Pakistan lives up to its public commitment to refrain from supporting and sponsoring terrorism against India,” said the statement.
This was an unambiguous statement from India, which suggests that India’s security agencies have made a considered assessment that the attack on an Army base in Uri on September 18 was perpetrated by Pakistani militants with support from state actors.
India’s top diplomat reminded the Pakistani envoy that that “the Government of Pakistan had made a solemn commitment in January 2004 to not allow its soil or territory under its control to be used for terrorism against India.”
“The persistent and growing violation of this undertaking is a matter of very serious concern.”
Stop Duplicity, Act
Alluding to the recent incidents, including Uri attack and Pathankot airbase assault, the ministry listed out recovered items which point to the involvement of Pakistani terrorist in these brutal killings. These include: a) GPS from the bodies of terrorists with coordinates that indicate the point and time of infiltration across the LoC and the subsequent route to the terror attack site; b) Grenades with Pakistani markings; c) Communication matrix sheets; d. Communication equipment; and e. Other stores made in Pakistan, including food, medicines and clothes.
India has asked Pakistan to probe the evidence and take immediate action. “If the Government of Pakistan wishes to investigate these cross-border attacks, India is ready to provide finger prints and DNA samples of terrorists killed in the Uri and Poonch incidents,” said the ministry.
“We now expect a response from the Government of Pakistan.”
With India providing specific evidence of complicity of Pakistani militants in recent terror attacks in the country, the ball is now in Pakistan’s court. Denials and equivocations simply won’t do, and hyped-up rhetoric, which Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif is set to unleash at the UNGA tonight, will not deceive anyone. It’s time for Pakistan to act and redeem its honour, in short.
Author Profile
- Manish Chand is Founder-CEO and Editor-in-Chief of India Writes Network (www.indiawrites.org) and India and World, a pioneering magazine focused on international affairs. He is CEO/Director of TGII Media Private Limited, an India-based media, publishing, research and consultancy company.
Latest entries
- India and the WorldDecember 16, 2024Kazan Spirit: India, China SRs to hold talks in Beijing
- India and the WorldDecember 10, 2024Malta backs stronger ties, sees India as a rising global power: Envoy
- Business with IndiaDecember 7, 2024New Uzbekistan aligns well with Viksit Bharat: Smita Pant
- India and the WorldNovember 17, 2024From Delhi to Rio: A Shared Agenda, Rise of Global South