India's permanent representative to the UN, Ambassador Ruchira Kamboj, has slammed states for blocking proposals to sanction some of the world's "most notorious terrorists" under UN rules.
The diplomat said that "double standards" render the credibility of the UN Security Council's sanctions at an "all-time low".
"The practice of placing holds and blocks on listing requests without giving any justification must end," the newly appointed envoy said on Tuesday.
In one particularly pertinent case, China has allegedly delayed designating Jaish-e-Mohammed* chief Masood Azhar as a global terrorist for ten years, according to Kamboj.
The Indian diplomat called out the secretary-general’s latest report on threats posed by Daesh* for not taking notice of the activities of the several proscribed groups in South Asia, "especially those that have repeatedly targeted India".
"Selective filtering of inputs from member states is uncalled for," Kamboj underlined while speaking at the UNSC meeting on 'Threats to international peace and security caused by terrorist acts'.
Meanwhile, as chair of the Counter-Terrorism Committee, India has called an in-person meeting of all 15 UNSC members in Delhi and Mumbai in October.
* Terrorist organizations banned in Russia and many other states