Lucknow: In his first public address after India's surgical strikes across the Line of Control, Prime Minister Narendra Modi did not directly reference the military action, but stated, "We are at a point now where those who support terror or allow it cannot go unpunished."
"Terrorism is the biggest enemy of humanity ... it knows no boundaries, it is bent only on destruction," the PM said at Dussehra celebrations in Lucknow, where he watched the Ramlila which enacts Ravana's defeat by Ram in the epic Ramayana to message that good triumphs over evil.
India's raids on terrorist staging areas in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir on September 28 are seen as direct military response for the attack last month on an army base in Uri in Kashmir, in which 19 soldiers were killed by terrorists from across the border.
Opponents have denounced PM Modi's relocation to Lucknow for today's festival as a blatantly political exercise ahead of the approaching election in Uttar Pradesh. But the PM's party denies that he has relinquished protocol in search of advantage with voters.
Before the PM's speech, Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who is also the parliamentarian from Lucknow, told the audience, "The PM has proved to the world that India is not weak," referring to the cross-border strikes.
Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi has charged the government with disingenuously appropriating the army's action in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir for self-aggrandizement. Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal is among those who have called for the government to share proof of the cross-border action against terrorists, which has been flatly denied by Pakistan as "fabricated."
For Mr Modi's visit, the traditional Ramlila in Lucknow's Aishbagh was revamped: instead of being open to everybody, 2,000 passes were sent to invitees who were screened by the Special Protection Group or SPG which guards the PM. The performance was accompanied by an Indian martial arts display. And the effigy of Ravana had a message against terrorism inscribed on it, a reference to the recent deadly attacks by Pakistani terrorists that have incited public anger.
"Terrorism is the biggest enemy of humanity ... it knows no boundaries, it is bent only on destruction," the PM said at Dussehra celebrations in Lucknow, where he watched the Ramlila which enacts Ravana's defeat by Ram in the epic Ramayana to message that good triumphs over evil.
India's raids on terrorist staging areas in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir on September 28 are seen as direct military response for the attack last month on an army base in Uri in Kashmir, in which 19 soldiers were killed by terrorists from across the border.
Before the PM's speech, Home Minister Rajnath Singh, who is also the parliamentarian from Lucknow, told the audience, "The PM has proved to the world that India is not weak," referring to the cross-border strikes.
Advertisement
For Mr Modi's visit, the traditional Ramlila in Lucknow's Aishbagh was revamped: instead of being open to everybody, 2,000 passes were sent to invitees who were screened by the Special Protection Group or SPG which guards the PM. The performance was accompanied by an Indian martial arts display. And the effigy of Ravana had a message against terrorism inscribed on it, a reference to the recent deadly attacks by Pakistani terrorists that have incited public anger.
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
Amid Reports Of Links With IPL Side, VVS Laxman Likely To Extend Stay At NCA Aiming To Achieve Net Zero Emission In Railways By 2030: PM Modi In PM Modi's Independence Day Speech, A Call For "24x7 For 2047" Rahul Gandhi's Seat At Red Fort Triggers Fresh Congress Attack On BJP "Don't Expect Anything From Me": Kolkata Hospital's New Principal Loses Cool Nurse Raped, Killed On Way Home, Body Found 9 Days Later In UP Most Of Landslide-Hit Chooralmala In Wayanad Safe Now, Says Scientist In A 1st, All Women India, Bangladesh Border Troops Share I-Day Greetinge Kim Dotcom To Be Extradited From New Zealand After 12-Year Fight With US Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.