
AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi has come out swinging after the brutal terror attack in Pahalgam, Kashmir. The incident, which left innocent civilians dead, has reignited India’s long-standing concern: Pakistan’s role in cross-border terrorism. Owaisi condemned the Pahalgam attack without mincing words, directly pointing fingers at Pakistan and its intelligence agency ISI for enabling the killers.
“They asked people their names and then killed them. This is not random violence. This is state-backed terrorism,” Owaisi said, calling out Pakistan’s role in what he described as “premeditated, cowardly murder.”
What This Means for Every Indian
While political statements often sound like soundbites, this one lands differently. When a prominent Muslim leader like Owaisi condemns the Pahalgam attack so bluntly, it pierces through political noise. It tells every Indian—no matter their faith or politics—that terrorism is the common enemy, and Pakistan’s denials are wearing thin.

This wasn’t just a statement. It was a stance. And in the political climate of India, that matters.
The Attack: Cold-Blooded and Calculated
The terrorists didn’t just strike; they selected. Eyewitnesses say the attackers asked for names before opening fire—chilling, deliberate, and targeted. It wasn’t just a terror act; it was an execution. The message was clear: fear over faith, chaos over peace.
For locals in Pahalgam and beyond, this is more than a tragedy. It’s a message from the shadows, trying to drag Kashmir back into blood-soaked headlines.
Owaisi’s Words Cut Through the Clutter
Politicians usually dance around hard truths. Not this time.
Owaisi didn’t hedge. He named names, blamed Pakistan’s ISI, and reminded the nation that condemnation isn’t enough—we need accountability. In a time when many still try to find nuance in terror, his clarity was refreshing.
And yes, it was politically risky. But the truth often is.
India’s Long Fight Against Cross-Border Terror
India has been here before—Uri, Pulwama, Pathankot, and now Pahalgam. Every time, the pattern is similar: terrorists trained in Pakistan cross over, kill innocents, and Islamabad offers denials laced with diplomatic outrage.
India’s response has varied—from surgical strikes to international pressure campaigns. But the core issue remains: Pakistan harbors and exports terrorism.
According to a UN report, groups like Jaish-e-Mohammed and Lashkar-e-Taiba still operate freely within Pakistan.
Why This Statement Matters Right Now
- Political Weight: Owaisi represents millions of Indian Muslims. His statement sends a message to both the community and the broader public—terrorism has no religion, but it does have a return address.
- Unified Front: At a time when political unity is rare, such unequivocal condemnation strengthens the national resolve.
- No Excuses Left: Pakistan’s narrative of “non-state actors” is no longer believable. Even domestic critics are calling them out.
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What’s Next: Beyond Words
Condemnation is important, but action is critical.
- Diplomatic Pressure must continue. India has already succeeded in getting global attention on Pakistan’s terror networks.
- Security Reinforcement in vulnerable zones like Kashmir is a must.
- Public Vigilance is the third pillar. Terror aims to divide; unity is the antidote.
Owaisi condemns the Pahalgam attack not as a politician scoring points, but as an Indian calling out an enemy hiding behind borders and lies.
The horror of Pahalgam is real. So is the responsibility. And it’s about time we stop playing nice with those who aren’t.