Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday said that India's expansionist policies in the region, led by the ruling right-wing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Narendra Modi, were becoming a threat to New Delhi's neighbours.
Tensions have flared up recently between Chinese and Indian troops in Ladakh's Galwan Valley region.
PM Khan compared the current Indian policies to the Nazi concept of "Lebensraum", which comprised policies and practices of settler colonialism.
Detailing the threat of Indian policies, the prime minister said New Delhi had border disputes with China and Nepal, tension over the Citizenship Act with Bangladesh and a threat of false flag operations against Pakistan.
The prime minister further said that India had carried out such actions after the illegal annexation of Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IoJK), which is a "war crime under 4th Geneva Convention" and illegally claiming Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK).
"I have always maintained the fascist Modi government is not only a threat to India's minorities by relegating them to second class citizens' status, but also threat to regional peace," said the prime minister in a tweet.
Earlier, the prime minister termed Indian allegations of infiltration from Pakistan's side of the Line of Control (LoC) baseless, and said it was a "continuation of a dangerous agenda".
He had also reminded the international community of its responsibility to act against the war crimes and genocide being perpetrated against the Kashmiri people in Indian Occupied Kashmir (IOK).
The prime minister had said the right-wing Indian government, under the cover of the pandemic, had continued its Hindutva supremacist agenda, driven by the fascist RSS ideology.