
Niraj Chopra, who holds the gold medal in India in India, said that now “is completely incomplete” that his opponent, Arshad Ndim from Pakistan, will attend his meeting in Bangaluru next month after a fatal attack in Hindi Jamo and Kashmir (IIOJK).
Relations between nuclear armed neighbors in India and Pakistan fell to their lowest levels in years after 26 tourists were killed on Wednesday.
One day before the attack, Chopra announced that the best archers in the world, including the Paris Ndim Olympics champion, was invited to the first classic Neverraj Chopra on May 24, an event that he hoped to pave the way for the Diamond League meeting in India one day.

However, the attack in IIOJK pushed severe criticism of Chopra’s decision to invite Nadim, although he is unlikely to attend the Pakistan launcher.
“There was a lot of talk about my decision to invite Nadim’s guidance to compete in Neeraj Chopra Classic, most of which was hate and assault,” said Chopra, who won gold in Tokyo and Al -Horsi in Paris on Friday.
“The invitation that she spread to the guidance from one athlete to another-nothing more, nothing less. The goal of NC Classic was to bring the best athletes to India and our country to be the home of global level sporting events.
“After all that happened over the past 48 hours, the presence of counseling in the classic NC has been completely uncomfortable.”
Media reports said that Nadim, the first to hold the Olympic Gold Medal in Pakistan, chose not to attend the Bangaluru meeting, which clashed with his training schedule for the Asian Championship in South Korea next month.
The strained relations between the two countries also turned to the world of sports earlier this year when the Indian cricket team refused to travel to Pakistan to obtain the ICC Champions League Champions Cup and play all its matches, including the March 9 final, in Dubai.