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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Kate Lamb and Jonathan Yerushalmy

India-Pakistan crisis: what we know so far

  • At least 26 people, including several children, have been killed and 46 injured after India launched attacks on what it claimed were nine sites of “terrorist infrastructure” inside Pakistan, in a sharp escalation of hostilities between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.

  • Pakistan called the strikes an “act of war” and claimed it had shot down several Indian air force jets. The office of the prime minister of Pakistan, Shehbaz Sharif, said the country’s armed forces had been authorised to undertake “corresponding actions”.

  • Pakistan said another five people were killed in artillery fire near the Line of Control, the de facto border between the two countries. Indian police and medics have said at least seven civilians were killed and 30 others wounded by retaliatory Pakistani firing and shelling overnight.

  • Indian defence minister Rajnath Singh, said on Wednesday his government had exercised its “right to respond” to avenge the killings of innocent civilians on Indian soil last month, claiming “we killed only those who killed our innocents”.

  • Pakistan’s National Security Committee, chaired by Sharif, said the Indian strikes were carried out “on the false pretext of the presence of imaginary terrorist camps” and deliberately targeted civilian infrastructure, including mosques. “These unprovoked and unjustified attacks martyred innocent men, women and children,” a statement said.

  • Islamist militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed said that 10 relatives and four associates of its leader, Masood Azhar, were killed in the Indian attack.

  • India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, cancelled plans to visit Europe.

  • India named its attack Operation Sindoor in a reference to the wives of victims of the militant attack in the Baisaran Valley in Pahalgam in April.

  • China called on India and Pakistan “to prioritise peace and stability, remain calm and exercise restraint, and avoid actions that could further complicate the situation”. Russia said it was concerned by the development, while Turkey urged “common sense”.

  • The UK said it was ready to help both countries to de-escalate the situation. Kashmir has been disputed territory since the British partitioned India in 1947.

  • The UK foreign secretary, David Lammy, said Britain “has close and unique relationships with both countries. I have made clear to my counterparts in India and Pakistan that if this escalates further, nobody wins.”

  • Flights across the region have been disrupted, with commercial airlines rerouting and cancelling journeys to avoid Pakistan’s airspace.

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