New Delhi (India) February 26:India harshly rebuked Pakistan in the UN at its Human Rights Council saying it was “hallucinating,” which it said was living in a “La La Land.”
The rebuke from Indian diplomat Anupama Singh was delivered at the 61st Session of the United Nations Human Rights Council which was held in Geneva. 

J&K Funds Beat Pak's Loan Request

India rejected Pakistan’s claim that the Chenab rail bridge was fake and emphasized that Jammu and Kashmir’s development budget is over double what Islamabad was looking to secure through the recent bailout package coming out through the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The exchange represents the latest in a long string of sharp diplomatic sparring between India and Pakistan at multilateral bodies such as the United Nations Human Rights Council over the subject of Jammu and Kashmir. 

OIC Just Echoes Pak's Jealous Talk

India also denounced claims made by Pakistan and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), saying that OIC had allowed the group to be used as an "echo chamber" for one member state, and pointed out even further that Islamabad's incessant propaganda reeks of envy.
"India is compelled to exercise its right of reply in response to the references made during the high-level segment by Pakistan and the OIC. We categorically reject these allegations," Singh said.

Chenab Bridge Real, Pak Daydreams

Emphasizing infrastructure and economic advancement in Jammu and Kashmir, Singh mentioned the Chenab Rail Bridge, called the world’s highest railway bridge inaugurated in the region last year.
"If the Chenab Rail Bridge, the world's highest bridge, inaugurated in Jammu and Kashmir last year, is fake, then Pakistan must be hallucinating or living in the 'La-la-land'", she said.
"Or perhaps it finds it unbelievable that the developmental budget of Jammu and Kashmir is more than double the recent bailout package it sought from the IMF," she added.

Kashmir Stays India's Part Always

Singh reiterated New Delhi’s customary stance, declaring that Jammu and Kashmir was, is, and will always remain an integral and inalienable part of India.
"Jammu and Kashmir was, is, and will always remain an integral and inalienable part of India. No amount of wishful rhetoric or audacious propaganda by Pakistan can alter the immutable fact that the accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India was completely legal and irrevocable, in accordance with the Indian Independence Act of 1947 and international law," Singh said.