Do not drag us into your electoral debate, Pakistan tells India

PM Modi accused Pakistan of trying to 'influence assembly elections in Gujarat'

FO terms Modi's accusations that Pakistan was trying to influence Gujarat polls as baseless and irresponsible. PHOTO: FILE

ISLAMABAD:
Responding to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s accusation that Pakistan is interfering in the hotly-contested state polls in his hometown of Gujarat, Islamabad has urged New Delhi to stop dragging Pakistan into its electoral debate.

“India should stop dragging Pakistan into its electoral debate and win victories on own strength rather than fabricated conspiracies, which are utterly baseless and irresponsible,” tweeted Foreign Office spokesperson Dr Muhammad Faisal.

The FO spokesperson’s reaction came amid a political storm in India after Modi accused the rival Congress of conniving with Pakistan to win the Gujarat state elections.

Modi’s unprecedented allegations cast a shadow over the election campaign with his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Congress trading barbs over the controversy.

According to Indian Express, Modi, while addressing an election rally in Banaskantha district on Sunday, referred to a purported tweet by a former serviceman Sardar Arshad Rafiq, who allegedly said Ahmed Patel, the political secretary to Congress President Sonia Ghandi, should be made the chief minister of Gujarat.

Congress leader Aiyar offered ‘supari’ for me in Pakistan: PM Modi

“Why is Pakistan’s senior retired army officer exercising his brains in the Gujarat election?” Modi had questioned. The Indian PM had also referred to a ‘secret meeting’ hosted by Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar during Pakistan former foreign minister Khurshid Mahmud Kasuri’s visit to India.

 

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