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Pakistan's appeal to the world for talks with the Taliban, pressure against India


 
Addressing the UN General Assembly, Prime Minister Imran Khan appealed to world leaders to hold talks and contacts with the Taliban in Afghanistan, but the Indian Prime Minister is busy exposing the flaws in the thinking of his Pakistani counterpart.

According to the AFP news agency, Indian officials say that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had talks with US President Joe Biden as well as during a wide-ranging quadripartite summit with the leaders of Australia and Japan about Pakistan. Expressed concern and claimed that the other parties also agreed with the opinion of the Indian Prime Minister.

Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Sharangala told reporters after talks between the two leaders at the White House that there was a clear feeling that Pakistan's role in Afghanistan should be looked at more carefully, with more scrutiny.

Addressing the UN General Assembly, Imran said that despite the frustration of the world powers over the caretaker cabinet, the Afghan Taliban had promised to respect human rights and form a comprehensive government since taking power last month.

"If the international community encourages them and encourages them to do so, it will be a victory for everyone," he said.

"We must strengthen the current government for the sake of the people of Afghanistan," he said.

In his speech, Prime Minister Imran Khan, who is considered a major critic of the 20-year-old war, termed US drone strikes as "extremist" in Pakistan and called for full cooperation between US forces and Pakistan Army and security forces. What

"A lot of people in the United States are very concerned about translators and the care of everyone who helped the United States, but what about us?"

"There should have been at least one word of praise, but instead of praising, think about how we would feel when we are blamed for the events in Afghanistan," Imran Khan said.

Read More : Prime Minister Imran Khan's smoky address to the UN General Assembly showed the United States and India a mirror

US officials have long accused Islamabad of supporting the Afghan Taliban, prompting Biden's predecessor, Donald Trump, to cut military aid to Pakistan.

Far from inviting Prime Minister Imran Khan, US President Biden has not even spoken to him so far, although US Secretary of State Anthony Blanken met with his Pakistani counterpart Shah Mehmood Qureshi at the United Nations on Thursday. Thanked for his help in repatriation.

In his speech, Imran accused the world of giving a complete apology to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for India's multi-billion dollar market.

He said that under the hateful Hindutva ideology of the fascist RSS-BJP government, India's 200 million Muslims were forced to live in fear and terror.

The Modi government has abolished the status of a special state in occupied Kashmir and introduced a citizenship law, which critics call a discriminatory law and believes it threatens to escalate religious violence.

An Indian diplomat responded to Prime Minister Imran's speech from the floor of the General Assembly.

Sneha Dubey, while making allegations of terrorism against Pakistan, claimed that unlike Pakistan, India is a democracy with a large population of minorities who hold high positions in the country.

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