Watch: Twitter is not pleased with this Pakistani video of children calling for India’s destruction
The video was released by the Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba Karachi and was titled ‘Azadi-e-Kashmir convention’.
On October 12, the Islami Jamiat-e-Talaba Pakistan, which calls itself the “largest students’ organisation in Pakistan”, organised an event in Karachi. The aim was to “build pressure on India and show our strength because we all are one”. The theme of the event was “ab Hind banega Pakistan” (India will now become Pakistan) and it was called the Azadi-e-Kashmir Convention of 2019.
Prior to the event, a promotional video was released by the organisation, featuring children. The 45-second video shows these children speak about their plans for a future when “Pakistan will win control over India”.
Seemingly harmless statements like “I will visit Shimla,” and “I will ask my father to buy property in Goa,” find mention in the video, but vicious statements like “We will employ the Indian Army to clean the streets” are also made by (presumably tutored) children in the video. One of the children featured also threatens the RSS and “promises to retribute the death of every single Muslim”.
The use of children to propagate hatred in the video was met with strong criticism and disapproval from Indians on social media.
This video produced by Pakistan Army uses children to peddle the Jihadi narrative.
— ketulkumar (@Ketul1Indian) October 13, 2019
This is proof enough of how Pakistan Army promotes #Jihad. And how they are promoting terrorism using children.
This why Pakistan is a terrorist statepic.twitter.com/G9TQ5NxVfu
Children are the vessels into which adults pour their poison. -Rushdie
— MP (@mpopat) October 13, 2019
This video only puts on display what Pakistan has been systematically doing to their children. Extremely disturbing. https://t.co/gEK7EHTDyG
The video coming from Pakistan showcasing children talking about India is full of hatred and shit. This Islamic organisation in Pakistan need to unlearn its filthy nationalism.
— Sharjeel Usmani (@SharjeelUsmani) October 13, 2019