World in distress: nuclear power prime minister alarms the UN for war with the next nuclear power

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has said he tried to tell world leaders of the growing risk of nuclear conflict with India because of Kashmir. Pakistan's prime minister has claimed to have sounded the alarm at the United Nations Organisation. [Getty Images] The UN during this week in connection with the danger of a nuclear war that [...]
Pakistan's prime minister has claimed to have sounded the alarm at the United Nations Organisation. [Getty Images] The UN during this week in connection with the danger of a nuclear war that could break up between his country and India due to the region in question.
India and Pakistan were close to a conflict in February when India bombed Pakistani territory for the first time in half century, and the two countries' planes were chased through the divided region, writes The Guardian, past Periscope.
Tensions dropped when Pakistan returned a crashed Indian pilot. But these tensions rose again after India revocoted the constitutional clause, which recognised the semi-autonomial status of the part of Kashmir, which it controls in August.
India had taken hundreds of thousands of troops to the region and made thousands of arrests.
Khan declared that move was prompted by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modali's Hindu nationalist ideology, which he called “fasist”.
The predominantly Muslim territory is under strict security measures, with phones and internet services being banned, but Khan predicts a clash if these measures are removed.
I'm afraid there will be massacres and the situation will be out of control,” said the Pakistani leader.
The main reason I came here is to meet world leaders at the UN and talk about it. We're heading towards a potential disaster with such proportions that we don't even think about. It's the first time since the Cuban Depression that two nuclear powers will fight each other. /Periscope











