United Nations: India's UN Mission has dismissed as "a pack of lies with no takers" the dossier that Pakistan gave UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres alleging that India was fomenting terrorism against it from Afghanistan.
The dossier given audaciously on the eve of the anniversary of the 2008 26/11 Mumbai attack by Pakistani terrorists had "zero credibility", the spokesperson told media on Wednesday.
"Pakistan hosts the largest number of terrorists proscribed by the UN," the spokesperson pointed out, adding, "The anti-India propaganda by Pakistan enjoys zero credibility in the international community."
"And today (as) we observe the 12th anniversary of the dastardly terrorist attack by Pakistan in Mumbai, their lies have no takers," the spokesperson said.
Earlier India's Permanent Representative T.S. Tirumurti drew attention to Islamabad protecting Al-Qaeda's chief Osama Bin Laden with a terse comment in a tweet: "Remember Abbottabad!"
Read:|Pakistan briefs P-5 envoys on its dossier against India
Bin Laden was killed in Abbottabad by US Special Forces in a house near the Pakistan Military Academy.
After a string of reverses at the UN and other international forums, Pakistan's Permanent Representative Munir Akram met Guterres on Tuesday and gave the dossier trying to link the cross-border attacks that he said were coming from the Afghan side to India.
The dossier of alleged Indian links to terrorism follows a string of diplomatic failures for Pakistan at the UN and international forums.
In September it failed to have Indians designated as terrorists by a Security Council sanctions committee and last month the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) decided to keep Pakistan on its grey list of countries that facilitate funding of terror organisations.
In August China was isolated at an informal meeting of the Council when it tried to bring up the Kashmir issue with the other four permanent members, the US, Russia, Britain and France, defending India and saying that the matter was a bilateral issue between the two countries.
At the high-level General Assembly meeting September, only Turkey's President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan mentioned Kashmir and except for him and Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan, the other 191 world leaders ignored it.
Last year the Council's panel that takes action against terrorists linked to ISIL, Al-Qaeda and similar groups and is known as the 1267 Sanctions Committee for the number of the resolution creating it added Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed (JEM) leader Masood Azhar to the list of designated international terrorists after China abandoned its protection of him as international pressure mounted.