Whenever India defeats Pakistan, the frustration across the border spills into hatred. The latest example came when Mohammad Yousuf abused Suryakumar Yadav on live TV, twisting his name into its abusive version of “Suarkumar” and openly calling him a pig. Instead of talking cricket, he mocked a Hindu name and insulted India’s captain.

Abusing India is often rewarded in Pakistan
Personalities who mock Hindus are celebrated as “true patriots.” Yousuf’s outburst looks less like analysis and more like a desperate attempt to stay relevant by pleasing the Pakistani crowd.
Did Yousuf regret his words? Absolutely not. He refused to apologize. Instead, he accused Indian media of hypocrisy and dragged up old taunts like the Pathan-Afridi “dog” jibe. This is Pakistan’s standard formula: hurl abuse first, play victim later.
For a man once respected as a cricketer, reducing himself to a street-level troll is shameful. But in Pakistan, such behavior guarantees claps, not criticism. Yousuf knew exactly what he was doing.
Afridi’s Fake Victories and Anti-Hindu Mockery
When team India shut the door on greeting, refusing to shake hands with Pakistan’s players, Afridi got embarrassed and mocked Suryakumar Yadav for the gesture. Yousuf is not the first to indulge in such disrespect. Shahid Afridi has long been the poster boy of Pakistan’s contempt for India. After Operation Sindoor, when India’s strikes humiliated Pakistan, Afridi brazenly claimed Pakistan had “won.” Even worse, he organized a rally in Pakistan and distributed goods as if celebrating a great victory. A military embarrassment was whitewashed into a fake festival.
Afridi also openly mocked Hindu faith multiple times. On national TV, he once boasted that he smashed his television because his daughter was watching a serial where a Hindu aarti was shown. It clearly shows their hate towards Sanatan Dharma.
From Cricketers to Ministers: Hate is the Script
This hatred is not limited to ex-cricketers. Pakistan’s leaders openly spit venom against India. Former Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar has repeatedly used her platform to accuse India of “terrorism” while whitewashing Pakistan’s role as the global terror factory, you will see her X profile is full of venom against india.
Former Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry shamelessly gloated in Parliament about Pakistan’s role in the Pulwama attack.
Even their Prime Ministers carry the same script. Imran Khan, instead of fixing Pakistan’s economy, spent years ranting about India at every international forum. The current PM Shehbaz Sharif is no different, continuing the tired rhetoric of “Kashmir, Kashmir” while ignoring the mess at home. In Pakistan, abusing India is not just entertainment — it is state policy.
When politicians, ministers, and cricketers all speak the same language of hate, the message is clear: this is not about individuals, this is Pakistan’s national character.
Pakistan’s Habit of Coping Through Abuse
This is not about two individuals. It is about a culture. In Pakistan, anger after defeat is never directed inward. They do not question their team, their board, or their performance. Instead, they insult India, Hindus, and anyone who represents Bharat.
The mindset that celebrates Afridi’s anti-aarti rant or Yousuf’s “Suarkumar” slur is the same mindset that wiped out Pakistan’s Hindu population. At Partition, Hindus were nearly 15–20% of Pakistan’s people. Today, they are barely 1.5%. Forced conversions, temple demolitions, second-class citizenship — and a culture of casual hatred — explain why.
When Afridi smashes a TV over Hindu prayer and is cheered, when Yousuf mocks a Hindu cricketer and is defended, when ministers and prime ministers rant against India to distract their people, it is clear: hatred of Hindus is not an accident in Pakistan. It is a tradition.


