March 4, 2025
2 mins read

India Hits Back at UN Rights Report

Bagchi’s statement was in response to unfounded remarks made about India, particularly in relation to Jammu and Kashmir….reports Asian Lite News

At the 58th regular session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Arindam Bagchi, sharply criticized the High Commissioner’s global update, urging a more accurate and “genuine update” on India’s human rights situation.

Bagchi’s statement was in response to unfounded remarks made about India, particularly in relation to Jammu and Kashmir.

“Mr. Vice President, allow me today to share some reflections about the High Commissioner’s global update. As India was mentioned by name, let me begin by emphasizing that the world’s largest democracy continues to be a healthy, vibrant and pluralistic society,” Bagchi said.

He dismissed the concerns raised in the report as “unfounded and baseless”, stressing that these comments did not reflect the ground realities of India.

Bagchi also urged a better understanding of India’s democratic and pluralistic ethos.

“We would urge a better understanding of India and our civilization’s ethos of diversity and openness, which continue to define our robust and often cacophonous civic space,” he emphasised.

A key focus of his speech was the region of J&K, which was mentioned in the report with an inaccurate reference to “Kashmir”. Bagchi pointed out that in the past year, the region had seen significant improvements, including increased peace, provincial elections, a booming tourism industry, and rapid development.

He added, “Nothing illustrates this divergence more than the passing reference to Jammu and Kashmir, erroneously referred to as Kashmir.”

“Ironically, in a year that stood out for that region’s improving peace and inclusive progress, be it the large turnout, provincial elections, booming tourism, or the rapid development pace, clearly, the global update needs a genuine update. At a larger level, we are concerned about global updates, oversimplifications of complex issues, sweeping and generalized remarks, usage of loose terminologies and apparent cherry-picking of situations,” said Bagchi.

He called for introspection within the office of the High Commissioner, stating, “Mr. Vice President, the High Commissioner has sensed a pervasive unease, but we would submit that a key element to addressing this is a long and hard look in the mirror by the office of the High Commissioner.”

The 58th regular session of the Human Rights Council (HRC 58) is taking place in Geneva from February 24 to April 4, 2025.

Previous Story

Jaishankar Due in UK, Ireland

Next Story

Trump Freezes Ukraine Aid

Latest from -Top News

EU, China United on Climate, Split on Rest

Climate pact offers rare unity as trade rifts, Ukraine war, and economic tensions dominate EU-China summitChina and the European Union struck a rare note of unity on climate change Thursday, issuing a

Hungary Pays the Trump Price

Despite his success in wooing Trump’s conservative base, Hungary is among the EU nations most vulnerable to Trump’s incoming tariff blitz Hungary’s populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has spent years forging close

Meta Muzzles Election Ads

Meta to Halt Political Ads in EU, Citing Legal Uncertainty Over New Rules Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, announced on Friday that it will suspend all political advertising

Holy War Talk

Russian officials have downplayed the Vatican’s potential role as a mediator, citing its location within NATO-member Italy, which has firmly supported Ukraine throughout the war. In a move that may signal an

Greece Battles Blazes, Heatwave Chaos

With temperatures soaring above 38°C (100°F), and dry, windy conditions prevailing, fires are spreading fast. A wildfire tore through a northern suburb of Athens on Saturday, forcing residents to evacuate as Greece
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Amazon eager to fill void left by Starlink in India

Project Kuiper is an initiative to launch a constellation of

India powers Nepal

The 106-km Koshi Corridor transmission line, costing a total of