Pakistan calls for global action on India’s ‘extra-territorial killings’ as New Delhi issues cross-border threat

Police officers stand guard at the main entry gate of Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in Islamabad on January 18, 2024. (AP/File)
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Updated 05 April 2024
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Pakistan calls for global action on India’s ‘extra-territorial killings’ as New Delhi issues cross-border threat

  • Foreign office issued the statement after a British media report on assassinations carried out by Indian agency in Pakistan
  • Indian defense minister vows to enter Pakistan to kill anyone fleeing across the border after attempting ‘terrorist activities’

ISLAMABAD: The foreign office strongly reacted on Friday to a media report in a British publication about India’s “extra-territorial killings” in Pakistan, calling for a joint international response, as a senior minister in New Delhi vowed to eliminate any individual fleeing across the border after attempting “terrorist activities.”
Pakistan issued the statement only a day after The Guardian detailed how Indian authorities had been targeting people it considered hostile to India in foreign lands. Based on interviews with Pakistani and Indian intelligence operatives, the report said India’s spy agency, Research & Analysis Wing (RAW), was involved in up to 20 assassinations in Pakistan since 2020.
The newspaper noted India had drawn its inspiration from Israel’s Mossad and Russia’s KGB that have been frequently accused of carrying out extrajudicial killings on foreign soil. The Guardian said RAW was directly controlled by the office of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and was widely believed to be behind the murder of a Sikh leader in Canada and a botched attempt on another dissident in the United States last year.
“The Indian network of extra-judicial and extra-territorial killings is now a global phenomenon that needs a coordinated international response,” the foreign office spokesperson, Mumtaz Zahra Baloch, told Arab News in a statement.
She said Pakistan’s foreign secretary Muhammad Syrus Sajjad Qazi had shared evidence linking Indian agents to the killings of two Pakistani nationals in their own country with the local and foreign media in January.
“These cases exposed the increasing sophistication and brazenness of Indian-sponsored terrorist acts inside Pakistan, with striking similarities with the pattern observed in other countries, including Canada and the United States,” she continued, adding such acts of New Delhi clearly violated Pakistan’s sovereignty and constituted a breach of the UN Charter.
“It is critical to bring to justice the perpetrators, facilitators, financiers and sponsors of these extra-judicial and extra-territorial killings,” Baloch said.
“India must be held accountable internationally for its blatant violation of international law,” she added.
Meanwhile, Indian defense minister Rajnath Singh told CNN News18 his country would not hesitate in killing anyone in Pakistan who goes to the other side of the border after attempting to commit “terrorist activities.”
“If they run away to Pakistan, we will enter Pakistan to kill them,” he told the channel in response to The Guardian report.
“India always wants to maintain good relations with its neighboring countries,” he continued. “But if anyone shows India the angry eyes again and again, comes to India and tries to promote terrorist activities, we will not spare them.”
This is the first time India has implicitly admitted its hostile assassination campaign in Pakistan. Earlier this year, when the Pakistani foreign secretary pointed a finger at India operatives behind the killings of its citizens, New Delhi described it as “false and malicious” propaganda.
India has frequently accused Pakistan of harboring militants, though Pakistani officials have always denied the claim.

With input from Reuters


Sindh chief minister pledges compensation within two months after Karachi plaza fire

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Sindh chief minister pledges compensation within two months after Karachi plaza fire

  • Murad Ali Shah says government is working with Karachi chamber to help shopkeepers restart businesses
  • January fire that killed at least 67 brought safety of Karachi’s commercial buildings under sharp focus

KARACHI: Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah said on Friday compensation for shopkeepers affected by last month’s deadly Gul Plaza shopping mall blaze would be released within two months amid calls for improved fire safety regulations to protect commercial buildings in Karachi.

The fire at Gul Plaza in January killed at least 67 people and left more than 15 missing, triggering renewed criticism of lax enforcement of building codes and emergency preparedness in Pakistan’s largest city.

Authorities said the blaze spread rapidly through the multi-story commercial complex, complicating rescue efforts and raising questions about wiring, access routes and fire safety systems in older markets.

“The government in collaboration with the Karachi Chamber is actively working to help shopkeepers restart their businesses and aims to ensure that compensation is provided within two months so that the shopkeepers can buy inventories to restart their businesses,” the chief minister said while addressing the inauguration of the My Karachi Exhibition, an annual trade and consumer exhibition, according to an official statement.

He said temporary locations had been identified where shopkeepers could operate rent-free until reconstruction is completed, paying only basic maintenance costs.

Shah reiterated the Sindh administration’s commitment to provide Rs 10 million ($36,000) to the families of those who died in the fire, along with immediate relief of Rs 500,000 ($1,785) for affected shopkeepers.

He said Gul Plaza would be rebuilt within two years “in the same manner and with the same number of shops,” adding that the new structure would be safer and constructed “without a single square inch extra.”

Business leaders at the event called for stricter enforcement of fire safety standards across Karachi’s commercial districts, citing unregulated electrical wiring and poor compliance as recurring causes of deadly market fires.