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India, Cyprus call for action against cross-border terrorism, Cyprus condemns Pahalgam attack
India, Cyprus call for action against cross-border terrorism, Cyprus condemns Pahalgam attack

United News of India

time11 hours ago

  • Politics
  • United News of India

India, Cyprus call for action against cross-border terrorism, Cyprus condemns Pahalgam attack

Nicosia (Cyprus)/New Delhi, June 16 (UNI) India and Cyprus on Monday called for disruption of terrorism financing networks, elimination of safe havens, dismantling of terrorist infrastructure and bringing perpetrators of terrorism to justice swiftly, while Cyprus strongly condemned the gruesome killing of civilians by terrorists in Pahalgam. The two countries also emphasised the need for a comprehensive, coordinated and sustained approach to combatting cross-border terrorism and underscored the importance of working collaboratively, bilaterally and with the multilateral system to eliminate the scourge. In a Joint Declaration issued after talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Cyprus President Nikos Christodoulides here, the two countries reiterated zero-tolerance approach to terrorism, rejecting any justification for such acts under any circumstances. They emphasised that those responsible for the attacks should be held accountable while Cyprus expressed solidarity and unwavering support to India in its fight against cross-border terrorism. Prime Minister Modi is currently visiting Cyprus as part of his three-nation tour, primarily to attend the 51st G-7 Summit in Canada. The two leaders urged all States to respect the sovereignty of other nations. They reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening multilateral efforts to combat terrorism and called for the expeditious finalization and adoption of the Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism within the UN framework. They called for concerted actions against all UN and EU-designated terrorists and terrorist entities, associated proxy groups, facilitators and sponsors, including terrorists under 1267 UNSC Sanctions Committee. They reaffirmed their shared commitment to countering hybrid threats that undermine peace and stability. They reiterated their strong commitment to continue taking active measures to disrupt terrorist financing channels including through the UN and Financial Action Task Force (FATF). Both Leaders discussed the need for reform of the United Nations Security Council, including ways to make it more effective, efficient, and representative of the contemporary geopolitical challenges. The two Leaders expressed support to forward movement in the Intergovernmental Negotiations on United Nations Security Council reform, and reiterated their commitment to make continuous efforts to move towards text-based negotiations. Cyprus reiterated its support for the enhancement of the representative character of the United Nations Security Council expansion with India as a permanent member in an expanded United Nations Security Council. They also agreed to engage in close co-operation and support each other at the United Nations including supporting each other's candidacies to multilateral forums. Acknowledging emerging challenges within the international security environment, the leaders stressed the importance of enhancing strategic autonomy, defence readiness and defence capabilities. They agreed to deepen their defence and security cooperation, including through collaboration between their respective defence industries, with a special focus on cybersecurity and emerging technologies. Recognizing both India and Cyprus as maritime nations with deep-rooted naval traditions, the two leaders discussed expanding cooperation to include the maritime domain and encourage more regular port calls by Indian naval vessels exploring opportunities for joint maritime training and exercises to enhance maritime domain awareness and regional security. In that vein, and in light of ongoing global crises, both sides committed to strengthening cooperation in emergency preparedness and coordinated crisis response. Drawing on past successful efforts, the leaders agreed to institutionalize coordination in evacuation and Search and Rescue (SAR) operations. Earlier the President of Cyprus warmly welcomed the Prime Minister Modi. Prime Minister Modi's visit, the first by an Indian Prime Minister to Cyprus in over two decades, marks a historic milestone and reaffirms the deep and enduring friendship between the two nations. The visit celebrates not only a shared history, but a forward-looking partnership, rooted in a joint strategic vision and mutual trust and respect, it said. The two leaders held wide-ranging discussions on bilateral, regional, and global issues, underscoring the growing breadth and depth of cooperation between Cyprus and India. They welcomed recent progress in economic, technological, and people-to-people ties, reflective of the dynamic and evolving nature of the relationship. Acknowledging the increasing alignment of their values, interests, international outlook and vision, both sides expressed determination to further advancing this partnership across key sectors. They expressed commitment to deepening their cooperation as trusted and indispensable partners contributing to regional and global peace, prosperity and stability. The two leaders underscored their shared commitment to peace, democracy, the rule of law, effective multilateralism, and sustainable development and reaffirmed their support for a rules-based international order, grounded in the UN Charter and international law, placing particular emphasis on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) with regard to freedom of navigation and sovereign maritime rights. The two leaders reaffirmed their unwavering support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of all nations. They held detailed discussions on international issues, including the situation in the Middle East and the war in Ukraine. The two leaders also discussed the importance of upholding the global non-proliferation architecture, recognizing the value of India joining the Nuclear Suppliers group. The leaders expressed intention to strengthen coordination within international organizations, including within the United Nations and the Commonwealth, and agreed to work closely on implementing the 2024 Apia Commonwealth Ocean Declaration, highlighting ocean governance as a pillar of global sustainability and resilience. In this context, the inaugural Commonwealth Ocean Ministers Meeting was held in April 2024 in Cyprus, also marked the establishment of the Blue Charter Centre of Excellence to advance sustainable ocean governance and strengthen capacity across Commonwealth member states. The two sides agreed to hold regular political dialogue and to utilize existing bilateral mechanisms, inter alia those between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus and the Ministry of External Affairs of the Republic of India, to streamline coordination and advance cooperation across various sectors. The above competent Ministries shall overview and monitor the implementation of the areas of cooperation included in the Action Plan that is to be prepared, in close coordination with the competent authorities of both countries. The Joint Declaration said both countries expressed strong commitment to the resumption of UN-facilitated efforts to achieve a comprehensive and lasting settlement of the Cyprus Question on the basis of a bizonal, bicommunal federation with political equality, in accordance with the agreed UN framework and the relevant United Nations Security Council Resolutions. India reiterated its unwavering and consistent support for the independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity, and unity of the Republic of Cyprus. In this regard, both sides emphasized the need to avoid unilateral actions as essential for creating a conducive environment for the resumption of meaningful negotiations. The Joint Declaration said the both countries share a strategic vision of serving as bridges between regions and underscored the significance of the India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) as a transformative, multi-nodal initiative that fosters peace, economic integration and sustainable development. Viewing IMEC as a catalyst for constructive regional cooperation, they reiterated their shared commitment to promoting stability in the Eastern Mediterranean and the wider Middle East and emphasized the importance of fostering deeper engagement and corridors of interconnection from the Indian peninsula through the wider Middle East to Europe. While recognizing Cyprus' role as a gateway into Europe and, in this context, its prospect to serve as a regional hub for transshipment, storage, distribution, and logistics, the two leaders welcomed the prospect of Indian shipping companies establishing a presence in Cyprus, encouraging the advancement of maritime cooperation through joint ventures involving Cyprus-based and Indian maritime service providers as a means of further strengthening economic and logistical ties. Looking ahead to Cyprus' Presidency of the Council of the European Union in early 2026, both leaders reaffirmed their commitment to strengthening EU–India relations. They recalled the milestone visit of the College of Commissioners to India, and expressed satisfaction on the launch of the first India-EU Strategic Dialogue and the progress already made in the priority areas identified during the visit including in trade, defence and security, maritime, connectivity, clean and green energy and space. Cyprus pledged to work towards the advancement of the EU-India strategic partnership during its Presidency. Both sides expressed readiness to support the conclusion of the EU–India Free Trade Agreement by the end of this year and expressed support for the ongoing work through the EU–India Trade and Technology Council. They expressed commitment to sustaining a forward-looking agenda beyond the 2025 Strategic Roadmap to deepen this key global partnership. Recognizing the growing strategic complementarity between Cyprus and India, the leaders committed to expanding economic ties through increased trade, investment and collaboration in science, innovation, and research. To advance cooperation, the two leaders noted they would welcome a Cypriot high-level delegation visiting India, including business representatives, as well as the organisation of a Cyprus–India Business Forum to promote investment opportunities. Both leaders agreed to promote collaboration in research, innovation, and technology, fostering stronger ties between startups, academic institutions, and industry, and supporting innovation exchanges in key sectors like artificial intelligence, digital infrastructure and research with a view of concluding a related MoU. Recognising people-to-people ties as a strategic asset and multiplier for deepening economic and cultural ties, the two sides resolved to work to finalise a Mobility Pilot Program Arrangement by the end of 2025. The two leaders agreed that an Action Plan is to be prepared to guide bilateral relations between the two countries for the next five years under the supervision of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus and India's Ministry of External Affairs. UNI RB RN

The evolving landscape of global anti-terror consensus: Implications for India & the US
The evolving landscape of global anti-terror consensus: Implications for India & the US

Time of India

time19-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Time of India

The evolving landscape of global anti-terror consensus: Implications for India & the US

Is the post-9/11 global consensus against terror fraying? The lines, for sure, are getting blurred. Donald Trump 's meeting with Syria's Ahmed al-Sharaa, a.k.a. Abu Mohammed al-Julani, a UN-designated terrorist who ousted the Assad regime to become president, is now a measure of the new bar in Washington. It's the same new rationale that has also let a convicted LeT associate become part of a White House religious advisory panel. Ismail Royer, a member of the Virginia jihad network and convicted for his links with LeT, served his sentence, and is now with Religious Freedom Institute, trying to retrace his old hardline position. But he still has a special place for LeT, distinguishing it from al-Qaeda. 'I liked the folks in LeT. I had been very opposed to Bin Laden. I thought al-Qaeda was a group of deviants,' he had said after his release from prison in January 2023. At one level, it may just seem to be another point of view. But, for India, when it looks at it from the context of Royer's appointment to a White House body, it signals a reversal of decades-long India-US anti-terror cooperation that brought LeT into al-Qaeda's tent by designating it under the 1267 UN al-Qaeda Sanctions Committee. And, now, there's resistance even within the UNSC to name The Resistance Front (TRF) for the Pahalgam terror attack, let alone accept linkages with LeT. Play Video Pause Skip Backward Skip Forward Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration 0:00 Loaded : 0% 0:00 Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 1x Playback Rate Chapters Chapters Descriptions descriptions off , selected Captions captions settings , opens captions settings dialog captions off , selected Audio Track Picture-in-Picture Fullscreen This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Text Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Caption Area Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Opacity Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Drop shadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like 넓어지는 모공, 레이저 대신 이걸 매일해요 미그닥 Undo Clearly, deep state priorities driven by a new Cold War mindset have taken root, where there's a loosening of controls over doing business with terror groups, their handlers and sponsors. Back in the 1970s, that's exactly how mujahideen groups were fostered by the US with the help of the Pakistani deep state - ISI's crowning moment - to take on the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. Two decades later, it came to bite the US. Just over two decades after 9/11, the lesson appears to have been forgotten. The anti-terror consensus is now giving way to a new version of the Great Game . Which is why India must up its engagement with the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. If Trump can shake hands with Julani and talk of waiving sanctions on Syria, cosy up to Turkiye and let his family acolytes do business with the Pakistani army and Jamaat-e-Islami in Bangladesh, then political engagement with the Taliban is now a security necessity for New Delhi. Live Events Significance of S Jaishankar's telephonic conversation with his Afghan counterpart Amir Khan Muttaqi, thanking him for Kabul's support following the Pahalgam attack, also points to different kind of new normal. The Taliban regime came out promptly to refute Pakistan's claims in the middle of Operation Sindoor that an Indian rocket had hit Afghanistan. India's engagement with Afghanistan was so far restricted to official- level deliberations. Now that there has been a political reach-out, physical meetings at the political level may follow. The Taliban regime has been looking for political recognition, which Pakistan has sought to block with support from the US and other Western countries. As a non-permanent UNSC member, Pakistan is also canvassing hard to become the 'penholder' on Afghanistan in UNSC with the purpose of discrediting the regime in Kabul. It also wants to be part of 1988 UN Taliban Sanctions Committee, which decides on periodic exemptions for leaders in Kabul to freely travel and operate funds. But Islamabad's hostile relationship with the Taliban, since the withdrawal of Nato troops, has nullified its military doctrine of using Afghanistan as 'strategic depth' in a conventional conflict with India. Conversely, it may have opened a rare opportunity for India to turn it into a 'strategic pincer' on Pakistan. Yes, games are afoot. China as principal weapons supplier to Pakistan is looking to corner mines in Afghanistan, but has a big Baloch problem that continues to target Sino-Pak interests in the region. Access to Gwadar port has also been hit, its viability also now in question with India and Iran finding ways to take forward the Chabahar project with benefits to Afghanistan. The Biden regime had given exemption to the project from Iran sanctions. Trump wants it reviewed afresh. The US deep state has stepped up its outreach in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar by finding new pathways of support within the Trump establishment. Hopes have revived in Islamabad that it can once again aspire to position itself as a conduit between Washington and Beijing through a complex web of intelligence and military games. For India, however, it's the entry of an unfriendly Turkiye into the equation that could get worrying, given how Trump is resetting the dial with Recep Erdogan. Amid all this, the already stressed UN system now runs the risk of witnessing its carefully-crafted anti-terror frame crack. Technical teams of UN terror sanction regimes are viewing proposals first from a national perspective, then stalling with questions over 'merit of evidence', just like Pakistan and China have always wanted. As a result, the entire edifice is on test, unable to leverage its own value effectively, let alone create pressure. A chaotic security situation is likely to play out with non-state actors finding active state sponsors and, therefore, a route to legitimacy. Dangerous as this mix is, it's vital for India to protect, project and advance its economic interests with the US, EU and Quad, knowing that these would still be the best stakes to build in a play that has not only reached its neighbourhood, but could well surpass the extent of the original Great Game.

India to send team to UNSC with fresh proof of Pakistan terror links
India to send team to UNSC with fresh proof of Pakistan terror links

New Indian Express

time11-05-2025

  • Politics
  • New Indian Express

India to send team to UNSC with fresh proof of Pakistan terror links

NEW DELHI: With the United Nations Security Council's (UNSC) 1267 sanction committee scheduled to meet next week, India has decided to send a team to the meeting. According to sources, the team will present the latest evidence highlighting Pakistan's complicity in terrorism. The evidence will also focus on the role of The Resistance Front (TRF), an offshoot of the banned terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba, in the Pahalgam terror attack on April 22, in which 26 innocent civilians were killed. The 1267 sanctions committee, also known as the ISIS and Al-Qaida sanctions committee, which was established under UNSC Resolution in 1999, is one of the most important UN subsidiary bodies working towards combating terrorism, particularly in relation to ISIS, Al-Qaida and associated individuals, groups, undertakings and entities, the sources said. It also oversees sanction measures related to individuals, entities and groups, associated with the terror organizations and ensures the implementation of sanctions pursuant to UNSC resolutions 1267 (1999), 1989 (2011) and 2253 (2015), they added. The Indian government's decision has come after a ceasefire was declared amid chances of Indian and Pakistan reaching to the brink of an all-out war after India's response to Pahalgam terror attack by conducting 'Operation Sindoor' in which nine terror hideouts deep inside Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK) were targeted and destroyed earlier this week.

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