India slammed for smear drive against Pakistan

-FO categorically rejects Indian Minister’s statement regarding an alleged drone attack in Occupied Kashmir

By Asghar Ali Mubarak

ISLAMABAD: Foreign Office on Wednesday slammed India for smear campaign against Pakistan by misusing recent drone attack in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).Terming it “irresponsible and misleading”, Pakistan on Wednesday categorically rejected the statement by Indian Minister of State for Home Affairs G Kishan Reddy regarding an alleged drone attack in IIOJK.
“Pakistan calls upon India to refrain from its reprehensible propaganda campaign as no amount of Indian falsehoods can succeed in diverting attention from India’s serious crimes in IIOJK,” the Foreign Office statement said issued here.
The Foreign Office said while conveniently choosing not to share any evidence, the Indian government had once again leveled serious allegations against Pakistan.
“This is yet another manifestation of the unsubstantiated propaganda and smear campaign against Pakistan that is characteristic of the Indian government and an obliging Indian media,” the statement added.
It said this was a familiar Indian ploy to externalize any blame, use baseless allegations against Pakistan as a smokescreen, and seek to undermine the indigenous struggle for self-determination of the Kashmiri people.
“The latest allegations further confirm what Pakistan has consistently pointed out that the BJP government stages “false flag” operations to malign Pakistan with terrorism-related allegations for narrow political gains,” it said. The Foreign Office said the use of Pakistan card either to win an election or to divert attention from an electoral defeat had also unfortunately become a standard practice.
Days earlier the Indian Air Force tweeted “Two low-intensity explosions were reported early on Sunday morning in the technical area of Jammu air force station. One caused minor damage to the roof of a building while the other exploded in an open area,”.
“There was no damage to any equipment. Investiga¬tion is in progress along with civil agencies.”
Dilbagh Singh, the police chief of India-occupied Kashmir, said in a statement that a “drone with payload” was suspected to have been used to “drop the explosive material”.