ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Friday warned the international community against the threat of Islamophobia, criticizing India’s Hindu nationalist government for sponsoring prejudice against Islam and encouraging hatred toward Muslims.
Addressing the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Khan said that the coronavirus pandemic gave the world an opportunity to bring humanity together, but the contagion was used to fan nationalism, increase global tensions, and give rise to racial and religious hatred and violence against vulnerable minorities in several places.
“These trends have also accentuated Islamophobia,” he said, adding that Muslims were continued to be targeted with impunity in many countries.
Calling India “the one country in the world where state sponsors Islamophobia,” the Pakistani prime minister maintained that “willful provocations and incitement to hate and violence must be universally outlawed.”
According to Indian newspapers and television channels, New Delhi’s delegate walked out of the hall as soon as Khan’s statement was broadcast by the world body.
Meanwhile, the Pakistani leader warned India against any aggression in his virtual address, urging the Security Council to play a role to avoid a “disastrous conflict” between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.
The UNGA session this year is unique in a way that world leaders are not attending in person and instead are sending recorded video statements, which would be introduced by the respective country’s envoy, and then played in the assembly’s hall “as live.”
In his wide-ranging address, Khan noted that Pakistan’s foreign policy was aimed to have peace with the neighboring countries, including India, and settle all outstanding disputes through dialogue.
“I want to make it clear that any attempt by the fascist totalitarian RSS-led Indian government to aggress against Pakistan will be met by a nation that will fight for its freedom to the end,” he said.
The prime minister pointed out that there would be no durable peace and stability in South Asia until the Jammu and Kashmir dispute was resolved on the basis of international legitimacy. Kashmir “has been rightly described as a nuclear flash point,” he said.
Both the nuclear-armed neighbors have fought at least three full-fledged wars over the Himalayan Kashmir valley that they claim in full, though they only rule parts of it.
“In order to divert attention from its illegal actions and atrocities in Indian Occupied Jammu and Kashmir, India is playing a dangerous game of upping the military ante against Pakistan in a nuclearized environment,” the prime minister said.
“The government and people of Pakistan are committed to standing by and supporting their Kashmiri brothers and sisters in their legitimate struggle for self-determination,” he said.
Khan noted that Pakistan had exercised “maximum restraint” despite constant Indian provocations and cease-fire violations along the Line of Control and the working boundary, targeting “innocent civilians.”
“We have consistently sensitized the world community about a false flag operation and another ill-conceived misadventure by India,” he said.
Talking about the illicit financial flows from developing countries to rich countries and to offshore tax havens, the prime minister said the practice was leading to the impoverishment of the developing nations.
“Money that could be used toward human development is siphoned off by corrupt elites,” he said, adding that the quest for getting back the stolen resources was nearly impossible, given the cumbersome procedures.
“If this phenomenon is unaddressed, it will continue to accentuate the inequality between the rich and the poor nations, and eventually spark off a far bigger global crisis than the present migration issue poses,” he said.
“The rich states cannot hold forth on human rights and justice when they provide sanctuary to money launderers’ and their looted wealth,” he said while urging the assembly to build a global framework to stem the practice and ensure speedy repatriation of stolen wealth.
The prime minister said the COVID-19 pandemic had hit the developing countries hard and they would need fiscal space to recover from the crisis.
About Afghanistan, he said that Pakistan fully facilitated the process that culminated in the US-Taliban Peace Agreement on 29 February 2020.
“Pakistan is deeply gratified that it has fulfilled its part of the responsibility,” he said.
The prime minister also described Palestine as a “festering wound,” adding that Pakistan would continue to support a two-state solution with pre-1967 borders, and Al-Quds Al-Sharif as the capital of a united, contiguous and independent Palestinian state.
Indian delegate walks out as Pakistani PM accuses New Delhi of 'sponsoring' Islamophobia
https://arab.news/mvq34
Indian delegate walks out as Pakistani PM accuses New Delhi of 'sponsoring' Islamophobia
- The Pakistani prime minister warns India against any aggression, urges Security Council to prevent ‘disastrous’ conflict
- Khan says the illicit financial flows from developing nations to rich economies detrimental to the developing world
Pakistan alarmed as Russia-Ukraine conflict intensifies, calls for immediate ceasefire
- Pakistan envoy urges both sides to resolve ongoing conflict through peaceful means during Security Council briefing
- Russia last Friday fired hypersonic ballistic missile capable of carrying nuclear warhead at Ukraine, drawing criticism
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s UN Ambassador Iftikhar Ahmad this week expressed alarm as the Russia-Ukraine conflict intensifies, calling for an immediate ceasefire and demanding both countries resolve their issues peacefully through dialogue.
The development takes place days after Russia last week fired an intermediate-range hypersonic ballistic missile at Ukraine called Oreshnik. The move drew sharp criticism as the missile is capable of carrying nuclear and conventional warheads. Russia said it fired the Oreshnik in response to what Moscow says was an attempted Ukrainian drone attack on Dec. 29 against one of Putin’s residences in northern Russia. Ukraine denies Moscow’s claims.
February 2026 will mark four years since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, triggering the worst armed conflict in Europe since World War II. The war has killed hundreds of thousands of people and forced millions to flee their homes.
“We are alarmed by the recent intensification in fighting with escalation in attacks from both sides, further worsening the already dire humanitarian situation,” Ahmad said on Monday during a UN Security Council briefing on the Ukraine conflict.
“Such actions not only perpetuate the conflict, but they also undermine trust, and the ongoing efforts for peace.”
The Pakistani envoy urged both sides to abide by the principles of international law and ensure civilians and civilian infrastructure are protected during the conflict. He said Pakistan’s position on resolving the issue through dialogue has not changed.
“Now, more than ever before, the overwhelming global opinion is on the side of ending this conflict through peaceful means,” Ahmad said. “This can only be achieved through a sustained, meaningful and structured dialogue.”
US President Donald Trump has been pushing both sides to strike a deal to halt the conflict, running shuttle diplomacy between Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky and Russia’s Vladimir Putin in a bid to get an agreement across the line. Plans to broker peace collapsed after an initial 28-point plan, which largely adhered to Moscow’s demands, was criticized by Kyiv and Europe.
Ahmad appreciated the US for attempting to resolve the conflict through peaceful means.
“We hope that all sides would make full use of the ongoing diplomacy, demonstrate genuine political will, and engage constructively to make meaningful strides toward a peaceful and negotiated settlement of the conflict, starting with an immediate ceasefire,” he said.










