Pakistan Stuns India with Strong UNGA Rebuttal, Forces Walkout
Rashid also addressed the Pulwama incident, stating that Pakistan had offered an independent and transparent investigation
New York – Tensions flared at the United Nations General Assembly as Pakistan delivered a powerful and fact-based rebuttal to India’s accusations, prompting a visibly unsettled Indian delegate to leave the hall mid-session after receiving a phone call.
In response to the Indian External Affairs Minister’s remarks targeting Pakistan, Second Secretary Muhammad Rashid of Pakistan’s UN Mission delivered a strong and articulate reply. He labeled India as a regional bully driven by hegemonic ambitions and extremist ideologies that threaten regional stability.
“We heard the same predictable, baseless accusations aimed at defaming Pakistan — entirely devoid of facts,” said Rashid. “India, unfortunately, is trying to hold the region hostage with its supremacist ambitions and divisive agenda.”
He firmly rejected Indian allegations and reminded the assembly that Pakistan has sacrificed over 90,000 lives in the fight against terrorism — a fact acknowledged by the international community. Rashid accused India of being the real perpetrator of cross-border terrorism, operating clandestine networks and using proxies to destabilize Pakistan.
As proof, he cited the arrest of Kulbhushan Jadhav, a serving officer in the Indian Navy and an agent of India’s intelligence agency, caught operating on Pakistani soil for subversive activities.
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Rashid also addressed the Pulwama incident, stating that Pakistan had offered an independent and transparent investigation — an offer India immediately rejected and has yet to support with any credible evidence.
“Pakistan seeks peace,” he said. “Real progress demands sincerity, mutual respect, dialogue, and diplomacy — values that Pakistan has always upheld. If India truly seeks peace, it must also embrace this path.”
Responding to India’s earlier intervention, Rashid noted that Pakistan had not intended to speak again at the forum. However, he expressed disappointment over India’s conduct, specifically criticizing the Indian delegate’s attempt to mock the name of a sovereign country.
Calling the act “shameful and juvenile,” Rashid stressed that mocking the name of a UN member state was not just undiplomatic, but a deliberate insult to its people.
As Rashid delivered his rebuttal, witnesses noted that the Indian delegate appeared visibly uncomfortable, took a phone call, and abruptly exited the hall, seemingly unable to respond to Pakistan’s arguments.
Rashid continued: “Such childish behavior only damages India’s own credibility and reveals its lack of any substantive counter-argument.”
He further accused India of supporting terrorism beyond its borders, citing credible reports that Indian intelligence agencies operate networks designed to destabilize neighboring countries by funding and guiding militant groups engaged in sabotage and international targeted killings.
“India’s repeated violations of international law and efforts to undermine regional peace are not just concerning — they expose the double standards in its so-called counterterrorism stance,” Rashid concluded.
The speech has since drawn praise from international observers for its clarity, composure, and evidence-based approach, highlighting Pakistan’s commitment to regional peace and its refusal to be silenced by baseless propaganda.
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