ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Foreign Office denounced the remarks of India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) regarding the alleged brief abduction of the Afghan ambassador’s daughter in Islamabad last week, terming them “gratuitous and unwarranted”.
Ambassador Najibullah Alikhilโs 27-year-old daughter Selsela Alikhil was allegedlyย abducted brieflyย and tortured by unidentified persons last Friday while returning from a bakery in Blue Area before being dropped alongside a road with her hands and feet tied and a note that โyour turn is nextโ and โcommunistโ.

However, the Pakistani governmentย saidย the evidence collected by police did not support the allegation of abduction and torture levelled by the Alikhil family, while Interior Minister Sheikh Rashidย termedย the kidnapping claims an “international racket” led by Indian intelligence agency Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) to defame Pakistan.
Commenting on the incident at a media briefing on Thursday, Indian MEA spokesperson Arindam Bagchi described it as โvery shockingโ,ย reported The Indian Express.

Bagchi noted that the matter involved Afghanistan and Pakistan. โHowever, since the Pakistan interior minister has dragged India into it, I would only like to say that even by their standards, Pakistanโs denial of the victimโs account is stooping to a new low,โ the spokesperson was quoted as saying.
Responding to Bagchi’s comments, the Foreign Office said: “Pakistan denounces the gratuitous and unwarranted remarks by the Indian MEA. India has no locus standi, whatsoever, on the matter.”
The statement said Indiaโs “malicious smear campaign” against Pakistan was well-known and independent organisations including the EU DisinfoLab had established Indiaโs credentials as a “purveyor of anti-Pakistan propaganda globally”.
“Even in the wake of the reported incident involving the daughter of the Afghan ambassador, Indian propaganda machinery against Pakistan was active and fake pictures of the ambassadorโs daughter were being circulated by Indian Twitter handles and websites,” the FO stated, adding that it was “unfortunate” that India had used such an incident to “peddle false narrative against Pakistan”.
The statement said the only domains where India had set standards were “state-sponsored terrorism, illegal occupation, disregard of UN resolutions, mass murders and repression against women in the territory under its illegal occupation, political violence against minorities, and running organised fake propaganda networks around the world”.
New Delhi, therefore, is “in no position to pontificate on โstandardsโ for other countries”, it added.

