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India turned the mirror on Pakistan after its Prime Minister Imran Khan delivered a speech at the UN attacking India, and recalled its record of genocide in Bangladesh, being a haven for terrorists and suppression of minorities.
During his pre-recorded speech shown at the General Assembly earlier in the day, Pakistan PM Khan had repeated the same allegations about India as last year, focused on the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and how the government was allegedly persecuting minorities.
He also raised the Kashmir issue, suggesting Security Council action there with a peacekeeping force.
Vinito, an Indian Foreign Service diplomat of the 2010 batch, who had walked out during Khan's speech, took him on exercising New Delhi's right of reply.
The only dispute, he said, was Islamabad's illegal occupation of Kashmiri territory, which it must vacate, Vinito said.
He said that Khan's speech was a "new low" and his words "demean the very essence of the UN".
"For a nation that is deeply buried in medievalism, it is understandable that the tenets of a modern civilized society such as peace, dialogue and diplomacy are farfetched," Vinito said.
He called Khan's speech the "incessant rant of someone who had nothing to show for himself, who had no achievements to speak of, and no reasonable suggestion to offer to the world".
Vinito reminded Pakistan of what he sarcastically called its "stellar record."
Referring to the massacre of over a million people by Pakistani troops and its allies in what was its province of East Pakistan in 1971 and is now Bangladesh, Vinito said: "This is the country that brought genocide to South Asia 39 years back when it killed its own people. This is also the country that is shameless enough not to offer a sincere apology for the horrors it perpetrated even after so many years."
On Pakistan's record in terrorism, Vinito recalled that Khan had hailed Al Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden as a "martyr". Pakistan had harboured him for several years till US Special Forces took him out in Abbottabad.
Pakistan had the "dubious distinction of hosting the largest number of terrorists proscribed by the UN" and provides them pensions, Vinito said.
On Pakistan's record on minorities, Vinito said: "This is the country that has systematically cleansed its minorities including Hindus, Christians, Sikhs and others, through the abuse of its blasphemy laws and through forced religious conversions."
While claiming to champion the rights of Muslims, Islamabad "has encouraged killing of fellow Muslims merely because they belonged to a different sect, or to a different region in Pakistan, and through sponsoring terrorist attacks against its neighbours", he said.
Pakistan subsequently exercised its own right of reply to India's reply. Muhammad Zulqarnain Chheena, a First Secretary, like his Prime Minister aimed his attacks on the BJP and RSS.
He said the Delhi riots earlier this year exposed the Hindutva ideology.
He also referred to Kulbhushan Jadhav, who India says was kidnapped in Iran and taken to Pakistan, as someone who helped terrorists in his country.
(With inputs from IANS.)
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