Minister of Outside Affairs S. Jaishankar with British Foreign Minister David Lammy during a meeting in Nový Delhi 7 June 2025. Photo: Ministry of external Affairs
India expects her partners to understand their “zero tolerance policy” for terrorism, said the Minister of Outside S. Jaishankar to visit British Foreign Minister David Lammy, adding that the country could not “face” the perpetrators of evil with his victims.
The strict statement of the Minister of the External Affairs came at the beginning of the interviews during the one -day visit to Mr. Lammy in Delhi on Saturday (June 6, 2025), followed by a few weeks after Mr. Lammy’s visit to Pakistan, saying that the US and the United Kingdom work with India and India) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBMS) (CBS) (CBMS) (CBMS). Comments in an interview with Reuters in Islamabad 17. May lost the feathers in Nový Dilli because India repeatedly denied the role of any third country in the four -day conflict between India and Pakistan after the terrorist attack Pahalgam.
“We practice zero tolerance policy against terrorism and expect our partners to understand, and we will never be perpetrators of evil to be a set of his victims,” said Mr. Jaishankar, thanking the British government for her condemnation of the terrorist attack of Pahalgam.
In his statement before visiting the British High Commission, she stated that Mr Lammy is dealing with “recent escalating in tension after the terrorist attack of Pahalgam and how the permanent period of peace is best supported in the interest of stability in the region”.
‘Zero tolerance for terror’: Jaishankar sends a strong message to Great Britain | Video credit: Hindi
Mr. Jaishankar’s strong words are part of a diplomatic reverse hit of the government against other countries about what is considered to be an Indian “composition” with Pakistan as a result of Sindoor operation, where many countries have expressed concern and offered to stop military escalation during the four -day conflict. The government faced the opposition to the claims of US President Donald Trump that he mediated the crisis, seemingly reinforced by the Russian presidential assistant Ushakov and Mr. Lammy in their relevant statements.
In addition, the opposition claimed that the government had diplomatically stopped Pakistan, who is an unstable member of the UN Security Council (UNSC), to become the Chairman of the Taliban Committee and Vice -Chairman of the Committee against Terrorism for a year, despite Indian ties, US, Great Britain, France, Russia and others in Russia and others in Russia and others in Russia Russia and others in Russia.
Official sources said “India will work closely with his friends” in the UNSC to follow the activities of Pakistan in the Council, given that Pakistan also assumes the UNSC Presidency in July. Sources said that Pakistan asked for the chairman of four committees dealing with terrorism and was nominated only for the top of two and co -chairman of some informal working groups (IWGS) due to the transfer of the council “ruled in Pakistan”. They added that at least 50 out of 343 individuals and entities that have been marked by UNSC because terrorists are connected or staying in Pakistan, and many globally wanted terrorists, including Usama bin Laden, lived and trained.
The Ministry of External Affairs did not respond to requests for commentary on whether the question of Pakistan’s role in the UN terrorist committees between Mr. Jaishankar and Mr. Lammy was discussed. Mr. Lammy met with Prime Minister Narendra Modim on Saturday (June 7, 2025) in the morning, for the second time he was assigned after his previous visit in July 2024. In mid -June at the G7 Summit, where India is a special invitation.
In his introductory notes, Mr. Jaishankar also referred to India-KUS FTA as a “milestone” in ties and potential of other bilateral agreements, including the initiative for technological security (TSI) for artificial intelligence (AI) and dialogue of strategic exports and technological cooperation to “drive” forward.
“Signing a free trade agreement is only the beginning of our ambitions – we are building a modern partnership with India for a new global era,” Lammy said in a statement before his visit to India, which points to growth, technology, climate crisis, providing “priorities of migration” and security problems.
Published – June 7, 2025 02:24
