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India slams Pakistan for 'bombing its own people, genocidal mass rape'

India’s strong response in the council came after Pakistan, in its statement, raised the issue of Jammu and Kashmir.

PTI

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  • As early as the 1960s, India deployed women medical officers to the Congo, Harish said. (ANI)

United Nations, 7 Oct

 

In a strong retort against Pakistan in the UN Security Council, India on Monday said its neighbour is a country that “bombs its own people” and conducts “systematic genocide”.

 

During his remarks to the UNSC open debate on “Women, Peace and Security”, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Parvathaneni Harish said Pakistan conducted Operation Searchlight in 1971 and sanctioned a systematic campaign of genocidal mass rape of 4,00,000 womencitizens by its own army.

 

“Every year, we are unfortunately fated to listen to the delusional tirade of Pakistan against my country, especially on Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian Territory they covet,” the Indian envoy said.

 

“A country that bombs its own people, conducts systematic genocide, can only attempt to distract the world with misdirection and hyperbole,” Harish said.

 

The world sees through Pakistan’s propaganda, he added.

 

On 25 March, 1971, the Pakistani army had launched a brutal crackdown involving widespread civilian killings throughout East Pakistan code-named ‘Operation Searchlight’.

 

Harish told the council meeting chaired by Russia that India’s record on the "women, peace and security" agenda is unblemished and unscathed.

 

India’s strong response in the council came after Pakistan, in its statement, raised the issue of Jammu and Kashmir. “To exclude Kashmiri women from the Women, Peace and Security agenda erases its legitimacy and undermines its universality,” the Pakistani delegate said in her statement.

 

Harish, in his remarks, also said that India remains unwavering in its commitment to the “Women, Peace and Security” agenda and stands ready to share its expertise with partners, particularly those in the Global South, fostering collective solutions to shared challenges.

 

He highlighted India’s consistent contribution to UN peacekeeping as an expression of its commitment to global peace.

 

“What distinguishes India's peacekeeping legacy is not merely the scale of our contribution, but our pioneering recognition of women as indispensable agents of peace,” he said.

 

As early as the 1960s, India deployed women medical officersto the Congo, marking one of the earliest instances of women serving in UN peacekeeping operations, the ambassador said.

 

This was not merely a symbolic gesture but a practical acknowledgement that women's perspectives, skills, and presence are essential to effective peacekeeping, he said.

 

In February 2025, India hosted the International Conference on Women Peacekeepers from the Global South, bringing together women peacekeepers from 35 nations.

 

The two-day gathering examined the evolving challenges facing women in peacekeeping operations — from addressing sexual exploitation and abuse to leveraging technology for enhanced effectiveness.

 

The conference was not merely a forum for discussion but a platform for developing actionable strategies to increase women's participation and their impact in future peace missions, he said.

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