With Russian President Vladimir Putin sitting next to him at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF), Modi emphasised that the world should move beyond the "good terrorism, bad terrorism" debate and block funding, weapons and communication modes of terrorists.
He also pushed for early decision on the Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism (CCIT), a resolution pending before the United Nations for the last 40 years.
During a question-answer session after addressing the SPIEF, Modi said, "terrorists don't manufacture weapons, but some countries supply guns to them; terrorists don't print currency, but some countries facilitate their financing through money laundering; terrorists don't own telecommunications system and social media networks, but some countries help them with that."
Although he did not name any country, the reference was clearly to Pakistan which has been indulging in all these activities in Kashmir.
"The call of time is that we should rise above specific incidents. Terrorism is the enemy of humankind. All should come together to fight terrorism," he said.
"Only lip service has been provided. There has been no discussion, nor any decision," he said.
The prime minister said he was glad that Putin had yesterday publicly stated that the resolution would be discussed.
"Now we should come out of good terrorism, bad terrorism (debate); my terrorist, your terrorist (syndrome). It is an issue of humankind. That's how we can fight terrorism," Modi said.
He said terrorism has no boundaries and all countries should fight it collectively.
Putin also said that India was facing a serious problem on account of terrorism and it was not an "imaginary thing".
He agreed with Modi that terrorism is a common threat and "that should unite us. We ought to understand what is happening and where it will lead us. We ought to be aware of the danger" of terrorism.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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