
Prime Minister Narendra Modi goes to an event in Madhubani on Thursday | Photo credit: PTI
Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised to “identify, track and punish” terrorists and their sponsors responsible for the brutal massacre of 26 tourists in Pahalgam.
Apparently, addressing a global audience, Modi Letly changed his public direction in Madhubani (Bihar) to the English and said: “Today, on the floor of Bihar, I say (sic) to the whole world, voluntarily, track and punish Gish and punish.
Firm
“The spirit of India will never be broken by terrorism. Terrorism will not be impunity.
Hello, he warned that terrorists and conspirators “would get a punishment that they cannot imagine.”
India, in the past, has actions to retaliate tasks following past terrorist attacks. After the terrorist strike in an army camp in URI in September 2016, where 19 Indian soldiers died, India launched surgical attacks through the control line (LOC) aimed at militant launch platforms in the Kashmir occupied by Pakistan. And in 2019, after 40 paramilitary personnel in pulwama, India reached a military camp in Balakot, its first attack of this type inside Pakistan since 1971.
“The time has come to drag what is left of horror Haven. The will of 140 million rupees will break the back of the teachers of terror,” said the prime minister.
Modi had interrupted his two -day visit in Saudi Arabia to return to Delhi on Wednesday and immediately presided over the cabinet security committee that decided to take AA measures to degrade diplomatic relations with Pakistan.
G20 information
Parleyys fragments and higher level commitment continued in the capital of Thorsday, with Foreign Secretary Vikram Miskri informing envoys of countries from G20 countries and other nations about the terrorist attack. The main diplomats, including those of the United States, the European Union, France, China, Russia, Germany, Italy, Qatar and Japan, were seen arriving at the Ministry of External Affairs were located in South Block. Interior Minister Amit Shah, and Minister of Foreign Affairs, S. Jaishankar, asked President Drugupadi Murmu to have a letter to terrorist attack.
Significantly, the American vice president JD Vance, in his statement before leaving India, said: “We are providing any help and help we can provide to the Government.”
Posted on April 24, 2025