| Welcome to Global Village Space

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Modi threatens Pakistani youth with bullets

Modi’s Aggressive Remarks Target Pakistan and Its Youth, Foreign Office Condemns Violent Rhetoric

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in his latest contemptuous remarks against Pakistan, has threatened the Pakistani youth.

He passed the remarks addressing the public rally in Kutch. Modi accused Pakistan of terrorism. He unleashed a tirade against Pakistan and accused it of sponsoring terrorism in India.

In his aggressive remarks, he targeted the youth of Pakistan and said that they should come forward against terrorism in their country.

Asking the neighbouring nation to “live a life of peace and happiness and eat bread…otherwise, my bullets are always there”.

Speaking at the bordering district of Kutch, he said: “I want to ask the people of Pakistan from this border district, what have you got from all these? India has become the fourth-largest economy in the world, and what is your state? Who ruined the fate of your children? Who forced them to go from door to door? You are the masters of terrorism.”

He further accused Pakistan of targeting innocent civilians in Pakistan. He said: “On May 9 night, drones came in, even in the Kutch border. They thought Modi was from Gujarat, so let’s do something in Gujarat… We attacked the dens of terrorism, but Pakistan tried to attack our innocent civilians, and when their drones started showing up, you saw how they started dropping one after another. It was only after that that the Indian army attacked their army with double the force.”

“We showed the world that we can raze the dens of terrorists sitting here,” Modi said, adding that “we also saw how Pakistan lost its balance after India’s attack.” “With the precision that the Indian army destroyed their airbases and defence setups, Pakistan was shivering,” Modi said.

The Foreign Office has strongly reacted to the belligerent statements against Pakistan.

Read more: Shehbaz Sharif extends gratitude to Turkiye on support

Reacting to the remarks, the Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs has expressed regret over the “continued erosion of maturity and decorum in Indian statecraft”.

Modi’s speech was “delivered in Gujarat with the theatrical flourish of a campaign rally rather than the sobriety expected of the leader of a nuclear-armed state,” noted the Foreign Office in its statement.

“The hate-driven invocation of violence in his remarks is deeply disturbing, not only for its content but for the dangerous precedent it sets in a region already burdened by volatility,” the FO added.

“These remarks violate the principles of the United Nations Charter,” the FO noted further. “Member states are obligated to resolve disputes peacefully and to refrain from the threat or use of force.”