India, Pakistan ceasefire holds
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By Saeed Shah, Asif Shahzad, Shivam Patel and Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - At 2.09 a.m. on Saturday, Ahmad Subhan, who lives near an air base in the Pakistan military garrison city of Rawalpindi,
Follow The Hindu’s latest developments on the ceasefire agreement between India and Pakistan after Operation Sindoor.
Amid escalating conflict, accusations of continued strikes, and grave concerns that the two countries may engage in a full-out war, India and Pakistan agreed to an immediate cease-fire on Saturday, May 10,
India and Pakistan engaged in the most intense fighting in decades with four days of escalating conflict that included fighter jets, missiles and drones packed with explosives. It ended almost as abruptly as it began.
N ARENDRA MODI, India’s prime minister, sounded as defiant as he did triumphant in speaking to the nation two days after a ceasefire with Pakistan. India’s four-day military operation, he said on May 12th,
The first word of the truce came from President Trump, who announced that the two countries had reached a "full and immediate ceasefire," after talks mediated by the U.S.
The Indian government on Tuesday disputed U.S. President Donald Trump's claim that the U.S.-mediated ceasefire between India and Pakistan came about in part because he had offered possible trade concessions.
Lack of enough bunkers is one of the reasons people are afraid to go back to their homes in border towns in Jammu and Kashmir.