UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Insisting he wasn’t making a threat, Pakistan’s leader denounced his Indian counterpart on Friday and warned that any war between the nuclear rivals could “have consequences for the world.” India’s prime minister took the opposite approach, skipping any mention at the United Nations of his government’s crackdown in the disputed region of Kashmir.
“When a nuclear-armed country fights to the
end, it will have consequences far beyond the borders. It will have
consequences for the world,” Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said in
a wide-ranging, at times apparently extemporaneous U.N. General
Assembly speech in which he called Modi’s actions in Kashmir “stupid”
and “cruel.”
“That’s not a threat,” he said of his war comments. “It’s a fair worry. Where are we headed?”
An
hour earlier, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the U.N.
meeting with a speech that focused primarily on his country’s
development, though he warned of the spreading specter of terrorism. He
never mentioned Kashmir directly.
India and
Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over the Himalayan region.
They’ve been locked in a worsening standoff since Aug. 5, when Modi
stripped limited autonomy from the portion of Kashmir that India
controls.
Modi’s Hindu nationalist
government imposed a sweeping military curfew and cut off residents in
the Muslim-majority region from virtually all communications. Khan said
there were 900,000 Indian forces in the region policing 8 million
Kashmiris.
“What’s he going to do when he lifts the
curfew? Does he think the people of Kashmir are quietly going to accept
the status quo?” Khan said. “What is going to happen when the curfew is
lifted will be a bloodbath.”
He added: “They
will be out in the streets. And what will the soldiers do? They will
shoot them. ... Kashmiris will be further radicalized.”
While
not mentioning Kashmir by name, Modi touched on terrorism: “We belong
to a country that has given the world not war, but Buddha’s message of
peace. And that is the reason why our voice against terrorism, to alert
the world about this evil, rings with seriousness and outrage.”
Modi has defended the Kashmir changes as freeing the territory from separatism. His supporters have welcomed the move.
Late
Friday evening, India took advantage of its right of response and sent a
diplomat — whose name was not immediately available — to briefly
condemn Khan’s words. She called them “hate speech” and “brinksmanship,
not statesmanship.”
“Rarely has the General
Assembly witnessed such misuse — abuse — of the opportunity to reflect,”
she said. She accused Khan of hypocrisy and said his words “reflect a
medieval mindset and not a 21st-century vision.”
Chinese
Foreign Minister Wang Yi said during his U.N. speech Friday afternoon
that “as a neighbor of both nations, China hopes to see the dispute
effectively managed and stability restored to the relationship between
the two sides.”
The difference in speech
styles between the Indian and Pakistani leaders was striking, with Modi
sticking closely to a prepared text and Khan appearing to speak off the
cuff and riff. While the U.N. distributed a transcript of Modi’s speech
moments after he finished talking, Khan’s had not been released hours
later.
Ahead of Modi’s and Khan’s
appearances at the U.N., residents of Indian-controlled Kashmir
expressed hope that their speeches would turn world attention to an
unprecedented lockdown in the region.
“We
really hope these leaders will do something to rid us of conflict and
suppression,” said Nazir Ahmed, a schoolteacher on the outskirts of
Srinagar, the main city in Indian-held Kashmir. “Conflict is like a
cancer hitting every aspect of life. And Kashmiris have been living
inside this cancer for decades now.”
As the
two leaders spoke Friday, large dueling protests supporting and opposing
India’s action in Kashmir were taking place across the street from U.N.
headquarters.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who met with both Modi and Khan this week, has urged the sides to resolve their differences.
India
and Pakistan’s conflict over Kashmir dates to the late 1940s, when they
won independence from Britain. The region is one of the most heavily
militarized in the world, patrolled by soldiers and paramilitary police.
Most Kashmiris resent the Indian troop presence.
Modi,
a pro-business Hindu nationalist, and his party won a decisive
re-election in May. The election was seen as a referendum on Modi, the
son of a poor tea seller whose economic reforms have had mixed results.
But he has enjoyed enduring popularity as a social underdog in India’s
highly stratified society.
Critics, however, say his Hindu-first platform risks exacerbating social tensions in the country of 1.3 billion people. Longtime Associated Press international correspondent Foster Klug is on
assignment at the U.N. General Assembly. Follow him on Twitter at
@APKlug. AP writers Shah Abbas and Edith M. Lederer contributed to this
story.
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