Twitter Slams NYT For Carrying Piece By Imran Khan
'Forget Penning Op-Ed, He Can Hardly Tell The Time': Twitter Slams NYT For Carrying 'Propaganda' Piece By Imran Khan
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan yet again ratcheted up the nuclear bogey when he warned of a possible military confrontation between the two nuclear-armed neighbours in the wake of Indian government's decisions in Jammu and Kashmir.
"If the world does nothing to stop the Indian assault on Kashmir and its people, two nuclear-armed states will get ever closer to a direct military confrontation," he wrote in op-ed piece in the The New York Times published today.
Khan wrote that all his efforts to start a dialogue for peace were "rebuffed" by India.
"On July 26, 2018, in my first televised address to Pakistan after winning the elections, I stated we wanted peace with India and if it took one step forward, we would take two steps. After that, a meeting between our two foreign ministers was arranged on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly session in September 2018, but India cancelled the meeting," Khan said.
The meeting, which was scheduled to take place between former EAM Sushma Swaraj and her Pakistani counterpart, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in New York, was called off by India hours after security personnel in Jammu and Kashmir were kidnapped and brutally killed.
PM @ImranKhanPTI pleas to world to not ignore #Kashmir cuz if they do, Pak India nukes may come into play. Why's Pakistan blackmailing world over Kashmir & why is NYT giving it platform to do so? Also any plea over Balochistan or the world shud ignore tht? https://t.co/DrqbubR4Xe— Taha Siddiqui (@TahaSSiddiqui) 30 August 2019
Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe until Imran Khan today, the last top Pakistani leader to have a NYT op ed was Zardari, nearly 11 years ago. He focused on terrorism in Pakistan. Today, IK focuses on Kashmir. Quite a dramatic shift in narratives. https://t.co/EGchGnfroV— Michael Kugelman (@MichaelKugelman) 30 August 2019
I am as critical of India and Pakistan as anyone. But there is a fine line between “opinion” and “propaganda” and @nytimes just decided to publish Pakistani propaganda without a corresponding Indian piece. This is a doozy. https://t.co/JBatByTEFV— Vipin Narang (@NarangVipin) 30 August 2019
Pakistan's PM Imran Khan pleas for Kashmir. Notably, though, no such plea for Baluchistan. https://t.co/plBrpuZayD— Kenneth Roth (@KenRoth) 30 August 2019
I find it mildly amusing that western journalists while hailing Imran Khan’s fiction in NYT haven’t asked him why such a ‘hard hitting’ oped hasn’t been written for Uyghur Muslims in China.— Sunanda Vashisht (@sunandavashisht) 31 August 2019
When will Imran Khan write an NYT op-ed urging the world to do something about China's persecution of Muslim Uyghurs? https://t.co/bNmshE5Xqn— Jonathan Landay (@JonathanLanday) 30 August 2019
PM can hardly tell what time of day it is, let alone pen an op-ed in the NYT. Get your head out of his ass. https://t.co/nw8m4J1nXW— Haris (@bandaydaputtar) 30 August 2019
Imran Raises Nuclear Bogey
Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan yet again ratcheted up the nuclear bogey when he warned of a possible military confrontation between the two nuclear-armed neighbours in the wake of Indian government's decisions in Jammu and Kashmir.
"If the world does nothing to stop the Indian assault on Kashmir and its people, two nuclear-armed states will get ever closer to a direct military confrontation," he wrote in op-ed piece in the The New York Times published today.
Khan wrote that all his efforts to start a dialogue for peace were "rebuffed" by India.
Imran Claims Pak Wanted Peace
"On July 26, 2018, in my first televised address to Pakistan after winning the elections, I stated we wanted peace with India and if it took one step forward, we would take two steps. After that, a meeting between our two foreign ministers was arranged on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly session in September 2018, but India cancelled the meeting," Khan said.
The meeting, which was scheduled to take place between former EAM Sushma Swaraj and her Pakistani counterpart, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, in New York, was called off by India hours after security personnel in Jammu and Kashmir were kidnapped and brutally killed.
He also talked about the February 14 Pulwama terror attack, the responsibility for which was taken by Pakistan-based terror outfit Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM).
"The Indian government promptly blamed Pakistan. We asked for evidence, but Mr Modi sent Indian Air Force fighter planes across the border to Pakistan," the Pak PM said.
'We Are Up Against New India'
"Evidently Mr. Modi had mistaken our desire for peace in a nuclear neighbourhood as appeasement. We were not simply up against a hostile government. We were up against a "New India," which is governed by leaders and a party that are the products of the Hindu supremacist mother ship, Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, or the R.S.S," Khan stated.
He objected to India's abrogation of Article 370 and 35A of the Indian constitution, which had accorded a special status to Jammu & Kashmir.
"The move is illegal under the Constitution of India, but more importantly, it is a violation of the United Nations Security Council resolutions on Kashmir and the Shimla Agreement between India and Pakistan," he claimed.
India has dismissed all such claims and maintained that its latest decision in J&K is a matter of its internal affairs.
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