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Updated March 20th 2025, 22:08 IST

Terror Factory Pakistan Makes Laughable Charge Against India On Baloch Uprising

Pakistan’s accusations come without evidence, at a time when the country is facing severe internal instability & a deteriorating economic crisis.

Reported by: Surabhi Shaurya
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Balochistan Protests
Terror Factory Pakistan Makes Laughable Charge Against India On Baloch Uprising | Image: AP

New Delhi: Pakistan, the epicenter of global terrorism, has once again resorted to baseless allegations, this time accusing India of fueling unrest in Balochistan. This laughable claim comes from a nation that has long harboured and nurtured terror groups destabilising the region.

Instead of addressing its own brutal suppression of Baloch voices and the rampant human rights abuses in the province, Pakistan desperately seeks to put blame onto India. The reality is that the Baloch uprising is a direct consequence of Pakistan’s decades-long oppression, enforced disappearances, and military excesses. No amount of propaganda can hide the truth—Pakistan’s own failures are the root cause of the crisis in Balochistan. However, during a weekly press briefing, Pakistan’s Foreign Office spokesperson Shafqat Ali Khan alleged that India was involved in fanning terrorism across South Asia. 

“Indian involvement is clear. They have been involved in terrorism in Pakistan. And secondly, it's not just Pakistan, they have been trying to destabilise the entire region, all South Asian countries. India's involvement in fanning terrorism in Pakistan, and its involvement in destabilising Balochistan is very clear to us,” Khan told reporters.  

Pakistan’s accusations come without evidence, at a time when the country is facing severe internal instability, growing unrest in Balochistan, and a deteriorating economic crisis.

‘Epicentre of Terrorism’ Pakistan Blames India Instead of Fixing Its Own Problems

The latest allegations follow a deadly ambush on the Jaffar Express in Balochistan on March 11, where Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) militants killed 21 passengers and four paramilitary soldiers before Pakistan’s forces eliminated the attackers.

Instead of acknowledging its own failure in countering terrorism, Pakistan has resorted to its old tactic of blaming India.

Pakistan’s accusations are not new as Islamabad has time and again tried to blame India for its own security lapses and insurgencies in New Delhi. 

However, India has always been a victim of cross-border terrorism sponsored by Pakistan, a fact recognised globally.

Responding to Pakistan's lies last week, India’s External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said, "The whole world knows where the epicentre of global terrorism lies. Pakistan should look inwards instead of pointing fingers and shifting the blame for its own internal problems and failures on others." 

Published March 20th 2025, 22:08 IST