Pakistan condemns Modi’s Gujarat speech as ‘reckless provocation’

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Pakistan condemned recent comments by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as “reckless provocation” and a threat to regional peace.

Delivering a speech in Gujarat a day prior, Modi had said, “The people of Pakistan must come forward to rid their country of terrorism. Their youth will have to come forward”.

“Live a life of peace, eat your bread or [choose my] bullet,” he added. Modi then about India’s progress, saying the country has passed Japan to become the world’s fourth-largest economy. He then attacked Pakistan, saying, “India believes in tourism, but Pakistan sees terrorism as tourism. That’s dangerous for the world”.

Modi further claimed that Indian forces had destroyed Pakistani air bases after attacks in the past and when Pakistan targetted civilians in May, India answered with double the force.Reacting to the remarks, the Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs has expressed regret over the “continued erosion of maturity and decorum in Indian statecraft”.

Modi’s speech was “delivered in Gujarat with the theatrical flourish of a campaign rally rather than the sobriety expected of the leader of a nuclear-armed state,” noted the Foreign Office in its statement.“The hate-driven invocation of violence in his remarks is deeply disturbing, not only for its content but for the dangerous precedent it sets in region already burdened by volatility,” the FO added.

“These remarks violate the principles of the United Nations Charter,” the FO noted further. “Member states are obligated to resolve disputes peacefully and to refrain from the threat or use of force.”

Moreover, Modi’s comments are an attempt to distract from what it described as ongoing human rights abuses and demographic changes in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK), added the statement.

Pakistan’s contributions to UN peacekeeping and global counter-terrorism efforts “speak louder than any hostile soundbite,” the FO maintained, accusing the Indian government of promoting extremism through “majoritarianism, religious intolerance, and the systematic disenfranchisement of minorities”.

Reiterating its commitment to peace and sovereign equality, Islamabad warned that any threat to its security would be met with a “firm and proportionate” response, citing Article 51 of the UN Charter.

Islamabad urged the international community to take note of what it described as India’s “escalating rhetoric”, which it said undermines regional stability and the prospect of lasting peace.

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