Pakistan losing grip on PoJK , public mood shifting towards India: Gaurav

JK News Today

Jammu, June 19: BJP Spokesperson and Convenor International Affairs Gaurav Gupta launched a blistering attack on Pakistan following its remarks on Jammu and Kashmir at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), stating that Islamabad has been “completely exposed before the global community for its systematic export of terrorism.”

Reacting to India’s strong diplomatic rebuttal in Geneva, Gupta said Pakistan’s repeated attempts to internationalise the issue of Jammu and Kashmir are nothing but “a desperate diversion from its internal collapse, state-sponsored extremism, and worsening human rights situation in Pakistan-occupied territories.”

Referring to India’s sharp intervention at the UN, Gupta said Pakistan has become a classic “Frankenstein state” a nation that cultivated extremist networks for decades and is now suffering the consequences of its own policies.

He said Pakistan’s leadership and security establishment have repeatedly faced global scrutiny over terror linkages, adding that India has consistently exposed this pattern at international forums.

“Pakistan cannot claim victimhood in terrorism when its own territory has become a breeding ground, training hub, and operational base for terrorist organisations,” he said.

Backing India’s position, Gupta referred to First Secretary Anupama Singh’s strong rebuttal at the UNHRC, where India categorically rejected Pakistan and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), reiterating that Jammu and Kashmir is and will always remain an integral part of India.

He said India’s position is rooted in “constitutional clarity, historical truth, and ground reality,” while Pakistan continues to rely on “propaganda narratives rejected by the global community.”

Gupta also pointed to growing unrest and dissatisfaction in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK ), stating that ground reports and public sentiment reflect “deep frustration with Pakistan’s misgovernance, neglect, and exploitative administrative system.”
He claimed that people in PoJK are “increasingly vocal about lack of development, basic rights, and dignity,” adding that this discontent exposes what he described as Pakistan’s “failed and coercive governance model sustained through force rather than consent.”
He further asserted that there is a “growing realisation among people in PoK that decades of Pakistan’s control have delivered only instability, deprivation, and repression,” while contrasting it with India’s democratic development model in Jammu and Kashmir.

The BJP leader said Pakistan must stop misusing international platforms and instead address its own worsening internal crises, including economic instability, political chaos, and deteriorating governance.
He added that Pakistan’s attempt to divert attention through anti-India narratives “no longer holds credibility at the global stage.”

Supporting India’s stance on the Indus Waters Treaty, Gupta said agreements cannot remain “frozen in time” while one party continues to allegedly sponsor cross-border terrorism.
He said Pakistan cannot demand international cooperation while simultaneously undermining regional peace and security.

Concluding his statement, Gupta said India’s position at the UN reflects a wider international recognition of Pakistan’s “declining credibility due to its continued association with extremist networks.”
“Pakistan’s propaganda diplomacy is losing ground. The world now sees the reality clearly, and India is only articulating what facts already show,” he said.