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India recently denounced China at the United Nations for blocking the bid to blacklist the 26/11 Mumbai attack accused Sajid Mir as a "global terrorist," saying China's move served 'petty geopolitical, political interests'.
India also maintained that the move portrays a lack of “genuine political will to sincerely fight” the challenge of terrorism.
Gupta also added in his statement at the UN, "When the proposal for listing Sajid Mir – did not get through the Global Listings of the UN Security Council Sanctions Regime despite several member states co-sponsoring it – we have righteous reasons to believe that something is genuinely wrong with the global counter-terrorism architecture”.
He also maintained that in order to tackle the issue of terrorism, it is crucial to avoid “double standards and this self-defeating justification of good terrorists vs bad terrorists."
Beijing blocked the proposal to blacklist Mir under the 1267 Al Qaeda Sanctions Committee of the UN Security Council as a global terrorist that had been first moved by the United States and co-designated by India.
The designation of the accused as a "global terrorist" would subject him to an assets freeze, travel ban and arms embargo.
Last September, China had put a hold on the proposal to designate Mir as a "global terrorist" at the UN.
Lashkar-e-Tayyiba's Mir is on India’s most wanted terrorists list, with a bounty of USD 5 million placed by the US for his role in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks. He was put in jail for over 15 years in a terror-financing case by an anti-terrorism court in Pakistan in June.
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