India-Pakistan Conflict Intensifies: Live Updates

David Hunter
5 Min Read
Disclosure: This website may contain affiliate links, which means I may earn a commission if you click on the link and make a purchase. I only recommend products or services that I personally use and believe will add value to my readers. Your support is appreciated!

The concern is to run deeply in the back of Kashmir and the rest of India that are in a range of Pakistani weapons, and also beyond them.

The Jammu and Kashmir region administered by India has been under an artillery bombardment by Pakistan since the beginning of this week. It is said that a broader strip of India, from Kashmir in the north to the cities of the Jaisalmer and Bhuj desert in the West, are within the reach of the attacks of Pakistani drones and missiles.

In Poonch, in the part governed by India of Kashmir, six miles from the “control line” with the Pakistani part, Narinder Singh, a director of the retired school, said that 13 people had been killed since it was launched from the Sindoor operation, AATT in encouraging victims over the victims of the victims.

The Pakistani shells have fallen in the Poonch district before, Singh said, but said: “This type of bombing has never put tasks in the city of Poonch.” Hey Hey added five of his neighbors, Hey added. “I don’t remember that bombing child, only the war of 1971.”

Mr. Singh said the market in his city had closed and that very few people were on the streets. “Only some medical and grocery stores are open,” he said. For Friday’s thinking, the bombing had intensified again, he said, and also had the feeling of fear. Duration The subsequent bombings added: “No one was killed, because they had moved to security houses and learned better how to stay safe.”

Damage in Poonch on Thursday after Pakistani bombing.Credit…Channi Anand/Associated Press

In larger cities of the plains of northern India, 12 or that government officials said they were the objectives of Pakistani drones and missile attacks on Wednesday night, it also seemed that no one had been harmed. The sense of fear is real but vague, fed by a nationalist press and social networks.

In the city of Northern India of Gwalior, which houses an air base, a civil hospital had painted its roof with a Red Cross in a white field. The further blackouts, in Chandigarh, another city with a great military presence, intended to protect the air attack sites. The measures have left Neha Chaudary, a housewife, wondering what to tell her two children.

“A feeling of stress has created them,” he said.

Ajay Sharma, a physiotherapist in Jaipur, capital of the state of Rajasthan, who shares a border of 665 miles with Pakistan, said he has been storing rations such as rice, lentils and flour. I have removed effective from banks. “

Families in New Delhi, 220 miles from the border, are doing the same, and also maintain their gasoline tanks. In response to anxiety, the National Petroleum Company of India published that its reservations were enough and that “there was no need to buy panic.”

Technology has changed risk perceptions since the 1971 war between India and Pakistan, and even from the high intensity clash of the countries in Kashmir in 1999. Then, the nuclear arsenals of the two countries were new. And the media were also relatively contained. Now, the flow of information, and misinformation, is constant.

And he thought that the possibility of climbing remains as not proven as it was 26 years ago, the fact that both parties have access to nuclear weapons has become strangely familiar.

“There we have full faith in our army, one cannot predict what will happen, given the circumstances,” said Dr. Sharma, Jaipur’s physiotherapist. “There is a sense of panic.”

Share This Article