
Minister of external affairs On Monday, he started an exhibition entitled “Human Cost of Terrorism” at the UN headquarters in New York and called for a unified global attitude against terrorism and a state -sponsored extremism and gently intervened in Pakistan. The Jaishankar, who spoke to the event, emphasized the urgency of exposure and responsibility for the effects of terror, especially when supported by states.
Referring to a terrorist attack of April 22, Pahalgam, India, India and Kashmir, which the UN Security Council strongly condemned five weeks ago, Jaishankar said that the world must refuse impunity for terrorists, refuse to treat them as proxy and resist any form of nuclear extortion. “Any state sponsorship must be exposed and must be counted,” he said, emphasizing that terrorism anywhere threatens peace everywhere.
“Terrorism is one of the most significant threats for humanity. It is the opposite of everything the UN means – human rights, rules and norms, and how nations should do their actions,” he said.
Jaishankar emphasized the importance of public calling terrorism when supported by the state against a neighbor, driven by extremism and associated with various illegal activities. “It is necessary to call it publicly and one way to achieve this is to show the chaos that has caused to global society,” he added.
The exhibition, organized by the Indian permanent UN mission, contains strong visual and text displays documenting the main terrorist attacks around the world, including Mumbai attacks in 1993 and 2008 and recent strikes Pahalgam. It suns victims and survivors and gives voice to those who can no longer speak and remind the international community of its shared responsibility to fight terrorism in all its forms.
Jaishankar urged the UN to exceed the memory of the action, strengthens the message of zero tolerance to the terrorism and the need for collective determination to protect peace and human dignity around the world. The exhibition will be exhibited at two locations in the UN headquarters from 30 June to 3 July and again from 7 to 11 July 2025.
April 22, terrorists attacked tourists on the Baisaran meadow in Pahalgam and killed 25 Indian nationals and one of Nepal, so several others were injured.
In response to the attack of Pahalgam, the Indian armed forces were targeted against the terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan and Pakistan occupied by Jammu and Kashmir, resulting in the death of more than 100 terrorists associated with groups such as Jaish-E-Mohammed, Lashkar-E-Taib and Hizbul.
April 24, India also announced a number of measures against Pakistan, including the suspension of Indus Waters, the shutdown of a single Operational Transition of the Attari border and a reduction in diplomatic links.
(Tagstotranslate) terrorism





