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    Pakistan a ‘Frankenstein State’, Supports terrorism: India tells UN

    United Nations, Jun 19: India has slammed Pakistan at the United Nations, calling it a “Frankenstein state” that gets shocked when its “own monster bites back”, as it accused Islamabad of “hosting, training and deploying” terrorists.

    The remarks were made by Anupama Singh, First Secretary at India’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations, on Wednesday, after Pakistan and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) raised the issue of Jammu and Kashmir during the Interactive Dialogue on the UN High Commissioner’s annual report.

    “India is compelled to exercise this right of reply in response to references made to it by Pakistan and the OIC. We categorically reject the baseless and malicious allegations made by Pakistan,” Singh said.

    The diplomat further said: “We also categorically reject the references to Jammu and Kashmir made by the OIC… For the record, Jammu and Kashmir was, is, and will always remain an integral and inalienable part of India. The only unresolved issue is Pakistan’s illegal occupation of Indian territories and their return.”

    She also said that Pakistan is a country whose sitting defence minister “boasts of hosting, training and deploying terrorists as state policy”.

    “This should surprise no one. An illegal and illegitimate occupation can be sustained only through force,” Singh said. “This is the country with the sitting Defence Minister boasts of hosting, training, and deploying terrorists and state policy, and yet Pakistan calls itself a victim of terrorism.”

    The diplomat further said: “Indeed, a paradox which only Pakistan could sustain. It is a living example of a Frankenstein state, which is shocked when its own monster bites back,” she said.

    She also said that “denial of basic freedoms has brought matters to a point where even demand for bread, electricity, rights, and dignity are met with bullets and brutality.”

    Singh also mentioned the Indus Water Treaty with Pakistan, calling it “outdated”.

    “Our position on the Indus Water Treaty is well known. It defies logic that a state which exports terror as an instrument of policy continues to demand the privileges of cooperation predicated on goodwill and friendship,” Singh said.

    The decades-old treaty was suspended after the Pahalgam terror attack in April 2025 that killed 26 civilians.