Berliner Boersenzeitung - Pakistan retaliates against India in spiralling conflict

EUR -
AED 4.180191
AFN 79.467082
ALL 98.287706
AMD 435.777534
ANG 2.036829
AOA 1044.199324
ARS 1289.41354
AUD 1.749855
AWG 2.049997
AZN 1.932455
BAM 1.957946
BBD 2.294114
BDT 138.391653
BGN 1.957946
BHD 0.428369
BIF 3381.505526
BMD 1.138097
BND 1.461602
BOB 7.851604
BRL 6.426033
BSD 1.136245
BTN 96.854135
BWP 15.251713
BYN 3.718375
BYR 22306.704165
BZD 2.282301
CAD 1.562829
CDF 3260.648416
CHF 0.935806
CLF 0.0279
CLP 1070.630546
CNY 8.199199
CNH 8.169171
COP 4732.845289
CRC 577.933312
CUC 1.138097
CUP 30.159575
CVE 110.385963
CZK 24.84008
DJF 202.331719
DKK 7.459834
DOP 67.103533
DZD 150.465884
EGP 56.705128
ERN 17.071457
ETB 153.814854
FJD 2.562771
FKP 0.84115
GBP 0.840377
GEL 3.118428
GGP 0.84115
GHS 12.554758
GIP 0.84115
GMD 81.94294
GNF 9842.785936
GTQ 8.721557
GYD 237.710488
HKD 8.912723
HNL 29.575409
HRK 7.536027
HTG 148.672919
HUF 404.198048
IDR 18457.6596
ILS 4.109629
IMP 0.84115
INR 96.965312
IQD 1488.431055
IRR 47942.342324
ISK 144.991845
JEP 0.84115
JMD 180.557859
JOD 0.806947
JPY 162.496398
KES 146.837218
KGS 99.527066
KHR 4547.983778
KMF 494.505732
KPW 1024.287425
KRW 1554.322281
KWD 0.348838
KYD 0.946838
KZT 581.126811
LAK 24547.900116
LBP 101803.458414
LKR 340.162758
LRD 227.239013
LSL 20.337486
LTL 3.360505
LVL 0.688423
LYD 6.207803
MAD 10.444145
MDL 19.701589
MGA 5080.567395
MKD 61.5975
MMK 2389.198393
MNT 4069.115394
MOP 9.163642
MRU 45.186516
MUR 52.022725
MVR 17.595125
MWK 1970.158942
MXN 21.865566
MYR 4.808452
MZN 72.73639
NAD 20.337486
NGN 1806.717596
NIO 41.815823
NOK 11.49852
NPR 154.966816
NZD 1.898295
OMR 0.43803
PAB 1.136245
PEN 4.157055
PGK 4.658104
PHP 63.038136
PKR 320.247334
PLN 4.252908
PYG 9064.933549
QAR 4.141238
RON 5.051328
RSD 117.348593
RUB 90.192246
RWF 1627.583541
SAR 4.268657
SBD 9.503984
SCR 16.293855
SDG 683.426975
SEK 10.821426
SGD 1.461942
SHP 0.894366
SLE 25.857752
SLL 23865.328457
SOS 649.31153
SRD 42.311602
STD 23556.313223
SVC 9.941895
SYP 14797.304405
SZL 20.332281
THB 37.062182
TJS 11.646062
TMT 3.989031
TND 3.396222
TOP 2.665536
TRY 44.39432
TTD 7.723464
TWD 34.127549
TZS 3067.438106
UAH 47.163082
UGX 4147.544969
USD 1.138097
UYU 47.201725
UZS 14662.067008
VES 107.94456
VND 29538.173464
VUV 137.531208
WST 3.061037
XAF 656.6766
XAG 0.034036
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.075765
XDR 0.816695
XOF 656.6766
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.52507
ZAR 20.288514
ZMK 10244.28397
ZMW 31.075053
ZWL 366.466818
  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.69

    +0.39%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    86.56

    -0.89%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.09

    -0.59%

  • NGG

    1.1600

    74.79

    +1.55%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    38.66

    -0.67%

  • RBGPF

    65.0500

    65.05

    +100%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    61.58

    +0.75%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    21.94

    -0.09%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    21.89

    +0.73%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    21.53

    +0.28%

  • AZN

    0.4600

    70.41

    +0.65%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    55.44

    +0.83%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    10.47

    -0.67%

  • RYCEF

    0.1200

    11.32

    +1.06%

  • BTI

    0.6200

    45.22

    +1.37%

  • BP

    0.1500

    29.09

    +0.52%

Pakistan retaliates against India in spiralling conflict
Pakistan retaliates against India in spiralling conflict / Photo: Tauseef MUSTAFA - AFP

Pakistan retaliates against India in spiralling conflict

Pakistan on Saturday launched counterattacks against India after three of its air bases were struck overnight, as the conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbours spiralled toward full-blown war.

Text size:

The South Asian countries have exchanged fire since Wednesday, when India carried out air strikes on sites in Pakistani territory over a deadly attack on tourists on the Indian side of the divided Kashmir region.

The clashes -- which have involved missiles, drones, and exchanges of fire along the de-facto border in disputed Kashmir -- are the worst in decades and have killed more than 50 civilians.

World leaders including the G7 group of industrialised nations have called for restraint, and the United States on Saturday offered help to get both sides talking as the violence intensified.

The Indian army on Saturday reported fresh Pakistani attacks along their shared border.

"Pakistan's blatant escalation with drone strikes and other munitions continues along our western border," the army said on X.

AFP journalists reported loud explosions in Srinagar, the capital of India-administered Kashmir.

The army said "multiple enemy drones were spotted flying over" a military cantonment in Amritsar in Punjab, a state adjoining Kashmir, and were "instantly engaged and destroyed by our air defence units."

Hours ahead of Pakistan's latest operation, the country's military spokesman Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry had accused India of having "attacked with missiles" targeting three air bases.

In the live broadcast aired by state television in the middle of the night, he said a "majority of the missiles" had been intercepted and "no flying assets" had been damaged.

One of the bases targeted, Nur Khan air base in Rawalpindi, the garrison city where the army is headquartered, is around 10 kilometres (6 miles) from the capital Islamabad.

Several blasts were heard from the capital overnight.

The air base is used to receive foreign dignitaries and Saudi minister of state for foreign affairs Adel Al-Jubeir had departed just hours earlier.

"Now you just wait for our response," Chaudhry warned India.

With the violence ratcheting up, Secretary of State Marco Rubio offered US help to deescalate.

Speaking with Pakistan's army chief Asim Munir on Saturday, Rubio "continued to urge both parties to find ways to deescalate and offered US assistance in starting constructive talks in order to avoid future conflicts," said spokeswoman Tammy Bruce.

- Disputed Kashmir -

The fighting was touched off by an attack on the Indian-run side of disputed Kashmir that killed 26 tourists, mostly Hindu men, which Delhi blamed on Islamabad.

India accused the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba -- a UN-designated terrorist organisation -- of carrying out the attack but Pakistan has denied any involvement and called for an independent probe.

The countries have fought several wars over the Muslim-majority Kashmir, which both claim in full but administer separate portions of since gaining independence from British rule in 1947.

Previous clashes have been mostly limited to the Kashmir region, separated by a heavily militarised border known as the Line of Control, but this time India has struck multiple cities deep in Pakistan.

Pakistan's foreign ministry alleged New Delhi's "reckless conduct has brought the two nuclear-armed states closer to a major conflict".

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi met top security officials on Friday, including his national security advisor, defence minister and the chiefs of the armed forces, his office said.

Most of the fatalities, which included children, were in Pakistan during Wednesday's first air strikes by India.

- Drone warfare -

The last days have been framed by a series of ripostes following attacks from each side.

On Friday, the Indian army said it had "repulsed" waves of Pakistani attacks using drones and other munitions overnight, and gave a "befitting reply".

Pakistani military sources said its forces had shot down 77 drones, with debris of many incursions seen by AFP in cities across the country.

An Indian army spokeswoman on Friday spoke of "300 to 400" Pakistani drones, but it was impossible to verify that claim independently.

Pakistan has accused India of fabricating the drone strikes, and early Saturday its military claimed Delhi's forces had bombed their own territory in Amritsar, without providing evidence.

Civilians have come under fire on both sides, with Islamabad and New Delhi accusing each other of carrying out unprovoked artillery shelling, and missile and drone strikes.

On Friday, shelling along the LoC killed five civilians including a two-year-old girl on the Pakistan said, officials said.

Across the border, a police official said one woman was killed and two men wounded by heavy shelling.

- Disruptions -

Armed groups have stepped up operations in Kashmir since 2019, when Modi's Hindu nationalist government revoked its limited autonomy and took the state under direct rule by New Delhi.

The conflict has caused major disruptions to international aviation, with airlines having to cancel flights or use longer routes that do not overfly the India-Pakistan frontier.

India has closed 24 airports, while schools in areas close to the border on both sides were shuttered, affecting millions of children.

The mega Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket tournament was on Friday suspended for a week, while Pakistan suspended its own T20 franchise competition indefinitely.

burs-ecl/hmn/tym

(K.Müller--BBZ)