Indian representative storms out of SCO meeting in protest to Pakistan showcasing ‘fictitious map’ of the region

16 Sep, 2020 07:56 / Updated 4 years ago

India and Pakistan accused each other of violating the protocol of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), as New Delhi protested Islamabad’s use of its “official map” of the region.

The national security adviser to the Indian government, Ajit Doval, abruptly walked out of a virtual SCO meeting hosted by its chair Russia. The incident happened because Pakistan had “deliberately projected a fictitious map that Pakistan has recently been propagating,” India’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Anurag Srivastava explained.

He stated that Pakistan’s gesture violated “the norms of the meeting,” after which India decided to leave “in protest at that juncture.”

A screenshot from the virtual meeting that was published in the Indian media showed an empty chair next to an Indian flag.

Also on rt.com ‘We’ll stand by people of Kashmir’: Pakistani foreign minister tweets new ‘political map’ of region that was blasted by India

Islamabad, meanwhile, blasted India’s conduct during the conference call. Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Zahid Hafeez Chaudhri said that India “tried to vitiate the atmosphere by objecting to Pakistan’s official map.”

“The map reaffirms Pakistan’s commitment to the UN Security Council Resolutions and the supremacy of the UN Charter,” he told the media.

The Pakistani government unveiled its new “political map” last month, which showed the whole territory of disputed Kashmir as part of Pakistan. It also placed parts of India’s Gujarat State in Pakistan’s domain.
Prime Minister Imran Khan then said that the map illustrated the country’s “national aspirations” and affirmed the solidarity with the people of Kashmir.

The map was immediately denounced by New Delhi as “political absurdity” that had no legal basis.

The SCO was founded in 2001 by China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. India and Pakistan joined in 2017.

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