India
When asked to comment if terrorists had made Indian soil their playground, Singhvi said, "terrorists do not belong to any country or any caste...we have to be vigilant."
Updated : Feb 14, 2012, 10:20 PM IST
Condemning the bomb attack on an Israel Embassy vehicle, Congress leader Abhishek Manu Singhvi today said eternal vigilance is a small price that needs to be paid for the country's security.
"The ultimate analysis is that terrorism has no boundaries, no religion, no caste and no nationality. Eternal vigilance is a small price which we must necessarily pay for our security," Singhvi, who was in Chandigarh today to argue a court case, told reporters.
When asked to comment if terrorists had made Indian soil their playground, Singhvi again said, "terrorists do not belong to any country or any caste...we have to be vigilant."
Commenting on the Uttar Pradesh polls, Singhvi said Congress will do well.
In a coordinated terror attack yesterday, an Israeli embassy car exploded when a magnetic bomb stuck to it went off in a high security area in New Delhi critically injuring a woman diplomat hours after a car bomb was defused near its mission in Georgian capital Tbilisi.