Tag: Kashmir

  • Many in Kashmir fear the deadly India-Pakistan escalation heralds another war

    Rubina Begum wails as she stands outside her house damaged by Pakistani artillery shelling at Salamabad village in Uri, north of Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Thursday, May 8, 2025. AP

    SRINAGAR, India – Poet Zareef Ahmed Zareef has watched India and Pakistan fight for decades over his homeland, the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir.

    He was born in 1947, the same year India and Pakistan became independent nations and British colonial rule ended. The two nuclear-armed neighbors have since fought two wars over Kashmir, which is split between them but claimed by both in its entirety.

    Now the 78-year-old worries this week’s dramatic escalation heralds yet another war.

    “We’ve been told that Kashmir is paradise on earth,” he said. “But for us, it’s living in a permanent fear of hell. Every war has brought misery, death and destruction.”

    His fears have only been exacerbated by the developments.

    On Wednesday, Indian missile strikes killed 31 people in Pakistan, including women and children. The strikes came in the wake of an April 22 attack, when gunmen killed 26 people, mostly Indian Hindu tourists, in the India-controlled part of Kashmir.

    India accused Pakistan of backing the militants who carried out the attack, a charge Islamabad denied. Pakistan has vowed to avenge the killings.

    Since Wednesday, exchanges spiked across the so-called Line of Control, the boundary dividing the Indian and the Pakistani-controlled sections of Kashmir.

    Militaries on both sides have mobilized. The people are scared.

    A devastated border town

    Indian and Pakistani soldiers guard their side of the frontier. Coils of razor wire snake around mountain foothills, by ancient villages and across fields of rice and corn. Watch towers stand on every few hundred meters (yards) and some Indian and Pakistani troops are so close they can wave to each other.

    Like many places along the frontier, the border town of Poonch in Indian-controlled Kashmir is swarmed by soldiers, their barracks close to civilian homes.

    Shortly after India’s strikes, Pakistani shells and bullets rained on Poonch, killing 13 civilians, including three women and three children, and wounding 44, Indian officials and medics said.

    Mehtab Din, 46, and his wife were lightly injured when three shells hit their home in Poonch. Their next-door neighbor was not that lucky, he said.

    “His two children were killed and he’s battling for his life in a hospital,” Din said. “Leaders are safe in their homes. The brutal axe of the war they start falls on us.”

    A shattered calm

    The region saw a tentative calm in 2021, after India and Pakistan renewed a ceasefire agreement from two decades earlier. But this weeks escalation shattered that.

    Rubina Begum said early morning explosions in her village of Salamabad in the area of Uri sent her running for cover with her children.

    “There was confusion and smoke all over. Thank God, we’re alive,” she wailed, standing in front of her heavily damaged home as relatives tried to calm her.

    Begum was among few left in Salamabad on Thursday. Many had fled in fear of more attacks; some houses were still smoldering.

    Caught in the middle of bitter rivalry

    In the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir, tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed after an armed revolt erupted against Indian rule in 1989.

    India decries the rebellion as Islamabad’s proxy war and state-sponsored terrorism. Many Muslim Kashmiris consider it a legitimate freedom struggle and support the rebel goal that the territory be united, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.

    Zareef, the poet, said the people of the region have become “cannon fodder” in the conflict.

    “One group says you belong to us,” he said. “The other too says you belong to us. But at critical times, they … punish us,” he said.

    Kashmiris have particularly reeled after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi scrapped the Indian-controlled sector’s semi-autonomy in 2019, bringing it firmly under India’s control. Since then, the government’s heavy-handed approach has largely silenced people, with civil liberties eroded and the press gagged.

    Jagmohan Singh Raina, a 72-year-old Sikh businessman said like him, many Kashmiris feel they’ve had enough of being used in the fight between Pakistan and India.

    “Don’t push us further,” he said. “End this warfare and let Kashmiris live in peace.”

    AP

  • Pakistan shoots down Indian drone in the city of Lahore, officials say

    LAHORE, Pakistan – Pakistan’s air defense system shot down an Indian drone early Thursday in the eastern city of Lahore, according to Pakistani officials, as India evacuated thousands of people from villages near the two countries’ highly militarized frontier in the disputed region of Kashmir.

    The drone incident follows Indian missile strikes on Pakistani locations that killed 31 civilians a day earlier, including women and children, according to officials.

    Tensions between the two countries have spiked since April 22, when gunmen killed 26 people, mostly Indian Hindu tourists, in India-controlled Kashmir. India accused Pakistan of backing the militants who carried out the attack, something Islamabad has denied.

    Local police official Mohammad Rizwan said a drone was downed near Walton Airport, an airfield in a residential area of Lahore that also contains military installations, about 25 kilometers (16 miles) from the border with India.

    Local media reported that two additional drones were shot down in other cities of Punjab province, of which Lahore is the capital.

    Two security officials said a small Indian drone was taken down by Pakistan’s air defense system. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media. It was not immediately clear if the drone was armed.

    The incident could not be independently verified, and Indian officials did not immediately comment.

    In Punjab’s Chakwal district, a drone cashed into farmland. No casualties were reported. District police chief Ghulam Mohiuddin did not say whose drone it was. Authorities have secured the wreckage and are investigating the drone’s origin and purpose.

    India said its strikes Wednesday targeted at least nine sites in Pakistan linked to planning terrorist attacks against India. Some of these targets were in Punjab and most of Wednesday’s casualties were in this province.

    Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed overnight to avenge the killings but gave no details, raising fears of a broader conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.

    Across the de-facto border in Indian-controlled Kashmir, tens of thousands of people slept in shelters overnight, officials and residents said Thursday.

    Indian authorities evacuated civilians from dozens of villages living close to the highly militarized Line of Control overnight while some living in border towns like Uri and Poonch left their homes voluntarily, three police and civil officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with departmental regulations.

    AP

  • Blast heard in Pakistan’s Lahore amid tensions with India, Reuters witness says

    NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD, May 8 – A blast was heard in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore on Thursday morning, according to broadcaster Geo TV and a Reuters witness, a day after Indian strikes at multiple locations in the country and fears of an escalation in conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbours.

    There was no immediate word on the reason for the blast.

    India hit “terrorist infrastructure” in Pakistan in the early hours of Wednesday, two weeks after it accused the Islamic nation of involvement in an attack in Indian Kashmir in which 26 people – mostly Hindu tourists – were killed.

    Islamabad had denied the accusation and vowed to retaliate to the missile strikes, also saying it shot down five Indian aircraft. The Indian embassy in Beijing termed reports of fighter jets being shot down as “misinformation”.

    Pakistan says at least 31 of its civilians were killed and about 50 wounded in the strikes and in cross-border shelling that followed, while India says 13 of its civilians died and 43 were wounded.

    The cross-border exchange of fire tapered off slightly overnight, Indian officials said.

    India also conducted blackout drills in regions close to its border with Pakistan, including the northern city of Amritsar which houses the Golden Temple revered by Sikhs, in anticipation of retaliation to its strikes.

    In Pakistan, meanwhile, most cities restored some normalcy and children returned to school, but in the border province of Punjab, hospitals and civil defence authorities remained on high alert.

    Although Pakistan’s federal government has pledged to respond to India’s strikes, Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told The New York Times on Wednesday that Pakistan was ready to de-escalate.

    With India saying it would “respond” if Pakistan “responds”, global powers have urged a calming of tensions. U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he hoped the countries could “work it out”, adding he “will be there” if he can help.

    The relationship between India and Pakistan has been fraught with tension since they gained independence from colonial Britain in 1947, and the countries have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir.

    The current escalation in tensions comes at a precarious time for Pakistan’s $350 billion economy, which is still recovering from an economic crisis that brought it to the brink of defaulting on external debt obligations in 2023 before it secured funding from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

    REUTERS

  • Pakistan vows retaliation after Indian strike over tourist deaths

    Map showing nine sites targeted by India in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir on May 7, 2025. REUTERS

    MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan/NEW DELHI, May 7 – India hit Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir with missiles on Wednesday and Pakistan vowed to retaliate saying it shot down five Indian aircraft, in the worst clash in more than two decades between the nuclear-armed neighbours.

    India told more than a dozen foreign envoys in New Delhi that “if Pakistan responds, India will respond,” fuelling fears of a larger military conflict in one of the world’s most dangerous – and most populated – nuclear flashpoint regions.

    The escalation comes at a fragile moment for Pakistan’s $350 billion economy, which recently emerged from an economic crisis with the government trying to shore up finances and make progress on the $7 billion International Monetary Fund loan programme of 2024.

    India said it struck nine “terrorist infrastructure” sites, some of them linked to an attack by Islamist militants that killed 25 Hindu tourists and one local in Indian Kashmir last month.

    Pakistan said at least 31 of its civilians had been killed and 46 wounded, a military spokesperson said, and that India “had ignited an inferno in the region”. This included deaths from the strikes and border shelling.

    Islamabad pledged to respond “at a time, place and manner of its choosing to avenge the loss of innocent Pakistani lives and blatant violation of its sovereignty”, emphatically rejecting Indian allegations it had terrorist camps on its territory.

    “For the blatant mistake that India made last night, it will now have to pay the price,” Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a televised address on state broadcaster PTV to the nation. “Perhaps they thought that we would retreat, but they forgot that…this is a nation of brave people.”

    Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told broadcaster Geo News that Islamabad would only strike Indian military targets and not civilians, in retaliation.

    The Indian strikes included Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, for the first time since the last full-scale war between the old enemies more than half a century ago.

    “The targets we had set were destroyed with exactness according to a well-planned strategy,” India’s Defence Minister Rajnath Singh said. “We have shown sensitivity by ensuring that no civilian population was affected in the slightest.”

    Islamabad said none of the six locations targeted in Pakistan were militant camps.

    Fifty-seven commercial aircraft were in the air over Pakistan when India attacked, endangering thousands of lives, the spokesperson said, adding they included airlines of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Thailand, South Korea and China.

    In Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistani Kashmir, the Indian strike had badly damaged a mosque-seminary in the heart of the city. Five missiles killed three people in the two storey structure, which also had residential quarters, locals said.

    Reuters journalists saw the roof and walls of the concrete building crumbled under the impact of the strikes and household items scattered on the first floor.

    An Indian source said the mosque was actually a “terrorist camp”, which Pakistan denies. Pakistan has said all targets were civilians.

    Hindu-majority India and Islamic Pakistan have fought two of their three wars since independence in 1947 over Muslim-majority Kashmir, which both sides claim in full and control in part.

    REUTERS

  • Residents of Pakistani Kashmir say they fled into hills during Indian strikes

    MUZAFFARABAD – Residents of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, said they fled their homes and ran into surrounding hills as India launched airstrikes early on Wednesday in a part of the city.

    Mosque loudspeakers told people to seek shelter as the ground shook repeatedly and the sounds of explosions reverberated, they said.

    “We came outside,” said Muhammad Shair Mir, 46, describing the events of the night. “Then another blast happened. The whole house moved. Everyone got scared, we all evacuated, took our kids and went up (the hill).”

    Many people gathered after sunrise near a mosque that had been hit in the strikes, its roof smashed and minaret toppled. Security forces had cordoned off the area.

    The district commissioner, a senior local official, said three people were killed near the collapsed mosque. In total, Pakistan’s military said 26 people were killed and 46 wounded in Indian attacks across Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir.

    India launched the strikes early on Wednesday, saying it was targeting “terrorist camps” that served as recruitment centres, launchpads, and indoctrination centres, and housed weapons and training facilities.

    Pakistan called it a “blatant act of war” as tensions spiralled between the nuclear-armed rivals after a deadly attack by Islamist gunmen on tourists in Indian Kashmir. It said none of the targeted areas were militant camps.

    District officials said that at the Line of Control that divides Pakistani and Indian Kashmir, mortar and light arms fire between the two armies continued into the morning and had killed at least six civilians on the Pakistani side.

    Police in Indian Kashmir said at least 10 people were killed and nearly 50 injured there.

    In Muzaffarbad, hospitals were operational and some small businesses opened in the morning but schools were closed and examinations cancelled, according to local authorities.

    Shair Mir said he and his family spent four hours in the open. Some of his neighbours had gone to hospital with injuries and the rest were shaken, he said.

    “This is wrong … poor innocent people, our poor mothers are sick, our sisters are sick .. our houses were rattled, our walls have cracked,” he said.

    REUTERS

  • Residents of Pakistani Kashmir say they fled into hills during Indian strikes

    MUZAFFARABAD – Residents of Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir, said they fled their homes and ran into surrounding hills as India launched airstrikes early on Wednesday in a part of the city.

    Mosque loudspeakers told people to seek shelter as the ground shook repeatedly and the sounds of explosions reverberated, they said.

    “We came outside,” said Muhammad Shair Mir, 46, describing the events of the night. “Then another blast happened. The whole house moved. Everyone got scared, we all evacuated, took our kids and went up (the hill).”

    Many people gathered after sunrise near a mosque that had been hit in the strikes, its roof smashed and minaret toppled. Security forces had cordoned off the area.

    The district commissioner, a senior local official, said three people were killed near the collapsed mosque. In total, Pakistan’s military said 26 people were killed and 46 wounded in Indian attacks across Pakistan and Pakistani Kashmir.

    India launched the strikes early on Wednesday, saying it was targeting “terrorist camps” that served as recruitment centres, launchpads, and indoctrination centres, and housed weapons and training facilities.

    Pakistan called it a “blatant act of war” as tensions spiralled between the nuclear-armed rivals after a deadly attack by Islamist gunmen on tourists in Indian Kashmir. It said none of the targeted areas were militant camps.

    District officials said that at the Line of Control that divides Pakistani and Indian Kashmir, mortar and light arms fire between the two armies continued into the morning and had killed at least six civilians on the Pakistani side.

    Police in Indian Kashmir said at least 10 people were killed and nearly 50 injured there.

    In Muzaffarbad, hospitals were operational and some small businesses opened in the morning but schools were closed and examinations cancelled, according to local authorities.

    Shair Mir said he and his family spent four hours in the open. Some of his neighbours had gone to hospital with injuries and the rest were shaken, he said.

    “This is wrong … poor innocent people, our poor mothers are sick, our sisters are sick .. our houses were rattled, our walls have cracked,” he said.

    REUTERS

  • Indian jets – shot down or crashed?

    Pakistan said it had shot down five Indian fighter jets in the worst fighting in more than two decades between the nuclear-armed enemies.

    But Indian officials so far have acknowledged only that three jets crashed on their side of divided Kashmir.

    The clashing accounts are typical of the archrivals attempts to control the narrative over their ongoing tensions.

    Pakistan:

    A spokesman for Pakistani military press department ISPR told Reuters: “So far, I can confirm that five Indian aircraft, including three Rafale, one Su-30, one MiG-29 have been shot. And one drone also shot down.”

    “I would like to emphasise that all of these engagements have been done as a defensive measure, after these aircraft opened fire on Pakistani territory.” said the official.

    He added that all of the Indian aircraft were firing from Indian airspace using long-range weapons.

    India:

    Four local government sources in Indian Kashmir, however, told Reuters that three fighter jets crashed in India’s Jammu and Kashmir territory.

    India has not confirmed the Pakistani reports of shooting down jets.

    REUTERS

  • The nine camps India says it targeted

    Here are the nine camps Indian officials said were targeted during ‘Operation Sindoor’:

    1. Markaz Subhan Allah, Bahawalpur
    2. Markaz Taiba, Muridke
    3. Sarjal, Tehra Kalan
    4. Mehmoona Joya Facility, Sialkot
    5. Markaz Ahle Hadith Barnala, Bhimber
    6. Markaz Abbas, Kotli
    7. Maskar Raheel Shahid, located in Kotli District
    8. Shawai Nallah Cam in Muzaffarabad
    9. Markaz Syedna Bilal

    REUTERS

  • What does Sindoor mean?

    India’s Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri holds a press briefing in New Delhi, India, May 7, 2025. REUTERS

    India called its overnight strikes ‘Operation Sindoor’.

    Sindoor refers to the red vermilion powder worn by married Hindu women. Its usage is considered as a sacred practice rooted in ancient tradition.

    The name is an apparent reference to the widows left by the April 22 attack that killed 26 men, most of them Hindu.

    REUTERS

  • 26 civilians killed, 46 injured in Indian attack on Pakistani civilian settlements

    ISLAMABAD – At least 26 people were killed and 46 others injured after India carried out strikes on six civilian settlements in Pakistan, Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, director general of the Inter-Services Public Relations, the media wing of the Pakistani army, confirmed during a press briefing on Wednesday.

    XINHUA