India Shines Light On Pakistan’s Annual Delusional Tirade: Distracts World With Misdirection, Hyperbole

In a chilling reflection of that same brutality, Pakistan’s military recently carried out airstrikes in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Image courtesy: AI-generated picture via Sora
On the one hand, Pakistan pitches for a Nobel Peace Prize for US President Donald Trump, who claims to have solved many global conflicts including the recent India-Pak issue, while on the other it bombs and attacks its own people. And India has once again exposed his hypocrisy of Islamabad.
Around a fortnight after Indian diplomat Kshitij Tyagi slammed Pakistan after civilians killed in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa at the UNHRC, New Delhi has launched a powerful rebuttal to Pakistan’s latest “delusional tirade” on Kashmir, during the recent United Nations Security Council (UNSC) debate.
Exposing Islamabad’s hypocrisy on human rights and peace, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Parvathaneni Harish described Pakistan’s annual anti-India rhetoric as a “delusional tirade”. Against the backdrop of Pakistan’s recent bombing of its own civilians in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, India’s sharp remarks reminded the world of the country’s violent legacy – from the 1971 genocide in East Pakistan to the present-day military oppression of its people.
What’s behind India calling Pakistan’s statements “delusional”?
Harish underlined how Pakistan’s annual anti-India rhetoric is a “delusional tirade” only aimed at misleading the world. He said, “Every year, we are unfortunately fated to listen to Pakistan’s delusional tirade against my country, especially on Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian territory they covet.”
The diplomat further noted that while India’s record on women, peace, and security remains unblemished, Pakistan has a history soaked in blood, one that cannot be erased by propaganda.
What historical atrocities did India remind the world of?
Invoking one of the darkest chapters in South Asian history, Harish recalled Operation Searchlight (1971), when the Pakistani Army unleashed a brutal campaign of systematic genocide in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). “This is a country that conducted Operation Searchlight in 1971 and sanctioned a campaign of genocidal mass rape of 400,000 women citizens by its own army,” he said.
The massacre led to the killing of nearly three million Bengali civilians, mass displacement, and widespread atrocities against women, a campaign the world still remembers as one of the gravest human rights violations of the 20th century.
How is Pakistan continuing that legacy today?
In a chilling reflection of that same brutality, Pakistan’s military recently carried out airstrikes in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, killing over 30 of its own citizens. The attacks, aimed at alleged militants, instead devastated civilian areas, revealing the Pakistani state’s continuing disregard for its own people’s lives.
Harish’s remark – “A country that bombs its own people, conducts systematic genocide, can only attempt to distract the world with misdirection and hyperbole” – hit at the core of Pakistan’s internal contradictions.
What did India say at the Human Rights Council?
At the 60th session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, India’s Counsellor Kshitij Tyagi also called out Pakistan’s failing democracy, collapsing economy, and military dominance. “Instead of coveting our territory, they would do well to vacate the Indian territory under their illegal occupation and focus on rescuing an economy on life support, a polity muzzled by military dominance, and a human rights record stained by persecution.”
Tyagi stated that Pakistan “continues to export terrorism, harbour UN-proscribed terrorists, and bomb its own people” — a damning summary of Islamabad’s self-destructive path.
Is the world seeing through Pakistan’s propaganda?
India’s firm stance at global forums reflects a growing international awareness of Pakistan’s duplicity, speaking of peace abroad while waging violence at home. The global community, as Harish asserted, “sees through Pakistan’s propaganda,” as the contrast between India’s development and Pakistan’s decay becomes increasingly stark.
At a time when Islamabad’s air force targets its own citizens in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, its moral authority to speak on Kashmir or human rights stands completely eroded.