Participants urged the Indian government "to take steps to severely punish" the JeM and other terrorist organisations.
Pulwama
Attack : Hundreds of Indian-Americans gathered in various US
cities to mourn the killing of over 40 Indian soldiers in one of the
worst terror attacks in Jammu and Kashmir's Pulwama district.
At
least 41 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) personnel were killed on
February 14 in a suicide attack claimed by Pakistan-based
Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) terror group.
The
attack has heightened bilateral tensions with both New Delhi and
Islamabad calling back their envoys.
Expressing
their outrage, hundreds of Indian-Americans
gathered at the 9/11 memorial on the outskirts of Chicago on Sunday
and urged that all nations need to stand together with India and the
US in their fight against those carrying out such "heinous
crimes".
In
a joint resolution read out on the occasion, the participants held
peaceful candle light protest in Naperville, Illinois and called upon
Pakistan to "end immediately" support to all terrorist
groups operating from its soil.
"We
mourn the loss of 40 Indian security personnel at the hands of
terrorists. This was an act of terror, an act of pure evil. We must
be firm in the face of evil and terror," said Indian-American
Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi in his address.
"The
threat of terrorism is not stronger than either the will of the
Indian people, the American people or the people of the world. Our
will is stronger. We will deal firmly with terrorism. We will deal
firmly with sponsors of terrorism. In this year of the 150th birth
anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, we will continue to be people of
nonviolence, peace and we will continue to open our arms to those who
seek to engage with us peacefully," he said.
"We
will defend ourselves, but we will not change our own character,"
Krishnamoorthi said.
Similar
events were held in Washington DC, New York, New Jersey, Silicon
Valley, Los Angeles, Detroit, Tampa, Houston, and Phoenix.
Participants
of the candle light protest urged the Indian government "to take
steps to severely punish" the JeM and other terrorist
organisations.
Expressing
solidarity with people of India and with the government, the diaspora
demanded that the UN designate JeM chief Masood Azhar a global
terrorist.
Today
the Indian community is grieving for those who have been killed and
wounded in this inhuman attack, said Krishna Bansal, one of the
organisers.
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