India targeted innocent children in Balochistan: Gurpatwant Singh

India targeted innocent children in Balochistan: Gurpatwant Singh

WASHINGTON: Gurpatwant Singh Pannun, the head of Sikhs for Justice and a global leader of the Khalistan movement, has made a major statement, revealing that the Modi government orchestrated the attack on a school bus carrying children in Khuzdar, Balochistan. He asserted that Pakistan should retaliate.

In a statement on X, Pannun strongly condemned Indian terrorism in Balochistan, saying that India carried out an act of terrorism and took the lives of innocent children. He claimed that evidence clearly shows the attack was executed by Indian proxies at the behest of the Modi government. He urged the international community and global armed forces to hold India accountable.

He further stated that the world’s military powers must take notice of India’s terrorism; otherwise, peace in the region will remain under threat. “The entire Sikh community stands with the families of the innocent martyrs. Modi is responsible for the bloodshed of innocent girls in Balochistan, and he must be held accountable for it,” Pannun added.

It is worth noting that India has been involved in the targeted killings of Sikh leaders not only in Pakistan but also in Canada and the United States—an open secret by now. Last year, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau expelled Indian diplomatic staff from the country after allegations surfaced that they were supporting those involved in the killings of Sikh leaders.

Similarly, after the killing of a Sikh leader on U.S. soil, fingers were again pointed at India by the Sikh community. The Modi government is itself involved in acts of terrorism, with Indian intelligence agency RAW using foreign proxies to carry out operations abroad.

In Pakistan, the banned Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and other organizations have reportedly been given terrorist training at camps established in India.

During Operation Bunyad-e-Marsous, Pakistan had also targeted an Indian officer named Raj Kumar Thapa—who was disguised as an Additional Deputy Commissioner and was running a similar network in Indian-occupied Kashmir.

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