Countries backing India on Kashmir will be ‘hit by missile’: Pak minister rakes up nuke threat
Earlier, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan had said that there is a possibility of a conventional war with India that could go beyond the subcontinent.
Earlier, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan had said that there is a possibility of a conventional war with India that could go beyond the subcontinent.
While talking about nationalism in India, he said that India is an exception as the country is more nationalistic, but it doesn’t see a tension between being nationalist and being international.
The minister also pointed out that the current suspension of the mobile network in the Kashmir valley is aimed at preventing the misuse of internet and social media for radicalising and mobilising anti-India forces.
US President Donald Trump had last week, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, tried to play the peacemaker offering to help with 'arbitration or mediation' in the Kashmir issue.
India further questioned if Pakistan can confirm the fact that it is home to 130 UN designated terrorists and 25 terrorist entities listed by the UN as of today.
The Baloch activist minced no words in stating that Pakistan is also a 'threat for the world as it is a rogue state and there is no law or justice'.
The UN chief's comments come at a time when Pakistan has been making efforts to internationalise the Kashmir issue - first at the UNSC last month and then again at the UNHRC on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, India is expected to assert its well-articulated position that restrictions were imposed to save human lives and cite the record that not a single civilian has died there in the last one month in any police action.
MEA spokesperson Raveesh Kumar also referred to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) saying that India has consistently expressed concerns to both China and Pakistan on the projects.
Pakistan has been desperate since the Centre decided to abolish the special status of Jammu and Kashmir granted under Article 370 of the Constitution.