India-Pakistan: Latest news on Kashmir crisis | CNN

India-Pakistan: Latest news on Kashmir crisis

TO GO WITH AFP STORY "Pakistan-vote-India-peace" by Charlie McDonald-Gibson In this picture taken on February 20, 2008 at the Wagah border post with India, some 30 km from Lahore, Pakistani honour guards (black uniforms) and Indian rangers (background) take part in the daily flag-lowering ceremony.  Every evening as dusk falls on the India-Pakistan border post near Lahore, crowds gather on either side of the frontier and scream slogans at each other in a choreographed show of bravado. India on February 20 welcomed the elections in Pakistan and said it hoped to see fresh talks with its nuclear-armed South Asian rival.           AFP PHOTO/LIU Jin (Photo credit should read LIU JIN/AFP/Getty Images)
How the latest Kashmir crisis happened
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Indian minister meets pilot released by Pakistan

Indian Defence Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has met Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, the pilot released by Pakistan at the Wagah border on Friday.

Sitharaman joined the pilot and his family earlier on Saturday at a military hospital in New Delhi, where he has been undergoing medical checks.

In a tweet, India’s Defence Ministry said Sitharaman conveyed “the sentiment of the Nation” to the pilot, adding she “appreciates his impeccable combat skills as well as calmness in adversity.”

"Friendship Express" to resume services

Stranded Pakistani passengers leave Attari Railway station on Thursday, following the temporary suspension by the Pakistani authorities of the Samjhauta Express rail service.

India and Pakistan have agreed to resume the services of the Samjhauta Express – one of the two train services connecting the two countries – from Sunday, RK Rana, a spokesperson for the Indian Railways, told CNN.

The service, which runs between New Delhi in India and Lahore in Pakistan, was suspended earlier this week following the escalation in tensions between the two neighbors.

Commonly referred to as the “Friendship Express,” the line was established several years ago as Indian and Pakistan officials worked to improve relations.

Its name translates to “compromise” or “settlement” in both Hindi and Urdu.

Two Pakistani soldiers killed near Kashmir border, Army says

Violence has continued across the de-facto border between Indian-controlled Kashmir and Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, known as the Line of Control (LoC).

Two Pakistan Army soldiers were killed in cross-border fire with Indian forces over the LoC on Saturday, according to Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the media wing of the Pakistan Armed Forces.

The fighting took place at Nakiyal Sector, the Army’s statement said. The dead soldiers have been named as Havaldar Abdur Rub and Naik Khuram.

The ISPR reports that Indian troops also sustained casualties and there was damage to the post.

China doesn't want to get caught in the middle of a India-Pakistan conflict

Beijing has important links with both Pakistan and India that it needs to balance – but it is on the verge of being sucked into the India-Pakistan crisis.  Earlier this week China’s Foreign Ministry called for both Pakistan and India to “maintain self-restraint and focus on regional peace and stability.”

Read more here.

How the Wagah border post became a symbol of India-Pakistan rivalry

Wing Commander Abhinandan, the pilot captured by Pakistan forces after his plane was shot down in a dogfight earlier this week, was returned to India on Friday evening at a famous border post in the village of Wagah.

While Indian-controlled Kashmir and Pakistani-controlled Kashmir are separated by a 435-mile de facto border known as the Line of Control (LoC), Wagah village sits on the international frontier to the south between the Pakistani city of Lahore and the Indian city of Amritsar.

The border post has taken on a symbolic role in the decades-long conflict over Kashmir, despite being outside the disputed region, thanks to a daily military parade known as the Beating Retreat ceremony.

Learn more about it, and the symbolic village where it takes place, here.

Crisis may be easing, but nuclear threat still hangs over India and Pakistan

India and Pakistan have fought several major wars – the last being in 1999 – involving thousands of casualties and numerous skirmishes across the Line of Control in the contested Kashmir region.

Since that last clash, both countries have quietly sought to enlarge and upgrade their military capabilities.

With its military buildup over those decades, India now exceeds Pakistan on most numerical measurements – fighter jets, troops, tanks and helicopters.

India far surpasses Pakistan in other measures, too, especially in military budget, $64 billion to $11 billion, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

But, as is often the case, numbers don’t tell the whole story. Read more here.

Russia's Lavrov urges dialogue between Pakistan and India

Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov speaks at the Munich Security Conference on February 16 in Munich, Germany.

Russia has continued its efforts to act as peace broker in the latest India-Pakistan Pakistan escalations, with the country’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov calling his Pakistani counterpart, Shah Mehmood Qureshi, on Friday.

During the call, Qureshi expressed gratitude for Russia’s role in de-escalating regional tensions, according to a statement from Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.  

The statement said Lavrov encouraged Pakistan and India to “resolve all issues through dialogue and peaceful means.”

Lavrov once again offered mediation services between the two quarrelling nations and offered to supply a venue for further talks, the foreign ministry statement added.

Indian PM welcomes pilot's return

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has tweeted well-wishes to the pilot, welcoming him back to the country.

“Welcome home Wing Commander Abhinandan! The nation is very proud of your exemplary courage,” he tweeted.

Modi added that India’s armed forces were an “inspiration” to its 1.3 billion citizens.

Captured pilot crosses border into India

After much anticipation, the captured Indian airman Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman finally crossed the border from Pakistan to India around 8:50pm local time (10:50 a.m. ET), ending his detention in Pakistani custody.

A statement from Pakistan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said the pilot was “treated with dignity and in line with international law” while in detention.

In a solemn handover, military personnel walked alongside Varthaman as he walked towards the Wagah border. After finally crossing the border, he was quickly ushered away by Indian army officers.

Crowds of people gathered at the Indian side of the border on Friday afternoon awaiting his expected return. However, they were left waiting for hours to see the wing commander’s release due to an unexplained delay.

His detention marked a significant escalation between the two nuclear-armed powers after Pakistan said its air force shot down two Indian fighter jets over the disputed border region of Kashmir. The skirmishes sparked the most serious crisis over the disputed border area in years.

Pilot to undergo detailed medical check

Wing Commander Abhinandan will now be taken for a detailed medical check, Air Vice Marshal of the Indian Air Force, RGK Kapoor told reporters.

“This checkup is mandated particularly because the officer has had to eject from an airplane which would have put his entire body under great stress,” Kapoor said.

The pilot had been held in Pakistan after his MiG-21 jet was downed on Wednesday during a dogfight between Pakistani and Indian warplanes over the ceasefire line in the disputed Kashmir region.

Pakistan releases captured Indian pilot

Pakistan is handing over the Indian wing commander pilot who has been held in custody since his jet was shot down over the disputed Kashmir region on Wednesday.

Wing Commander Abhinandan was released at the Wagah border crossing on the demarcation line dividing the two countries.

Pakistan Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Thursday that the gesture should be seen as an expression of his country’s willingness to de-escalate recent tensions.

How the Wagah border post became a symbol of India-Pakistan rivalry

Wagah – the border post where the Indian pilot is due to be released by Pakistan – has taken on a symbolic role in the decades-long conflict over Kashmir, despite being outside the disputed area.

Shashank Joshi, defense editor at The Economist and former senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), a defense and security think tank, told CNN that Wagah was probably chosen as the site of the handover for logistical reasons.

“It’s a high-security location,” Joshi said, adding that Wagah is the principal border crossing between the two nations and other personnel swaps have taken place there in the past.

Indian security forces stand guard near the India-Pakistan border in Wagah on March 1, 2019, as they wait for the return of an Indian Air Force pilot being returned by Pakistan

The village straddles the border – with the eastern half in India and the western half in Pakistan – and sits on the Grand Trunk Road, one of the main overland routes between the two nations.

Read more about Wagah’s significance here.

Pakistan has "not done us a favor" by pledging to release pilot - Indian minister

Still no sign of the pilot. However, India’s Minister of State for External Affairs says Pakistan “has not done us a favor” by returning the Indian wing commander – despite Islamabad describing the move as a “gesture for peace.”

In a written statement on his Twitter account, Indian minister Vijay Kumar Singh said the release was under the Geneva Conventions.

Singh said India welcomed the move, but that “it is the first of many steps that #Pakistan must take to reinforce their commitment to peace.”

He added: “We need an affirmative & verifiable action by Pakistan against terrorism.”

Pakistan's military chief talks to US, UK and Australia

While we await the release of the Indian wing commander, Pakistan’s spokesperson has tweeted that the country’s army chief, Qamar Javed Bajwa, has spoken with top military personnel from the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia.

Major General Asif Ghafoor said in the tweet that Bajwa had discussed the “prevailing standoff” between Pakistan and India and “its impact on peace & stability in the region.”

According to Ghafoor, Bajwa told the countries that Pakistan would “surely respond to any aggression in self defence.”

Crowds begin to celebrate on Indian side

People have gathered at the Wagah border to welcome the return of the Indian Air Force pilot, Wing Commander Abhinandan.

While some dance, others are waving the national flag of India and shouting slogans.

Indian men shout slogans and wave the national flag near the India-Pakistan border in Wagah on March 1, 2019, as they wait for Pakistan to return an Indian Air Force pilot.

Officers await the release of Indian pilot

Officers and media have gathered on both sides of the Wagah border, ahead of the imminent release of the captured Indian pilot, whose jet was downed during a warplane dogfight.

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan announced that the pilot, who has been identified as Wing Commander Abhinandan, would be released Friday as a “gesture for peace.”

Officers await the return of the Indian pilot on the Indian side of the Wagah border crossing on Friday, March 1.
The media gathers on the Pakistani side of the Wagah border crossing on Friday, March 1.

Pakistan to allow some flights in and out of three major airports

Pakistan will allow limited traffic through three of its major international airports as of 4 p.m. local time on Friday, according to the chief spokeswoman for the country’s Civil Aviation Authority.

A limited number of international and domestic flights in and out of Karachi, Quetta and Islamabad airports will be allowed, spokeswoman Farah Hussein told CNN.

Pakistani airspace is set to be open in full from 1 p.m. local time on March 4.

'Beating retreat' parade canceled on Indian side

Indian Border Security Force personnel wearing brown uniforms and Pakistani Rangers wearing black uniforms take part in the Beating Retreat ceremony at the India-Pakistan Wagah border post on January 22, 2019.

The daily military parade held at the Wagah border, known locally as the “beating retreat” ceremony, has been canceled on the Indian side, Indian Border Security Force (BSF) spokesperson Subhendu Bhardwaj told CNN.

The ceremony, which sees Pakistan’s Rangers and India’s Border Security Force take part in a lowering-of-the-flags ceremony, is typically held before sunset at around 4 p.m. local (5:30 a.m. ET).

Why China doesn't want to get caught in the middle of a India-Pakistan conflict

China's President Xi Jinping (R) shakes hands with Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on November 2, 2018.

The escalation between Pakistan and India this week has put Beijing in an awkward position. 

It isn’t just that China shares a border with the contested region of Kashmir – Beijing also has important links with both Pakistan and India that it needs to balance.

China has close economic, diplomatic and military ties with Pakistan, making it one of the nation’s closest allies in region.

Meanwhile, China’s long-running trade war with the US has forced Beijing to look for alternative trading partners. As result, China has started to rebuild ties with rival power India and Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

“They have to do something to show that they are helping to keep things under control, while not appearing unreliable as Pakistan’s ally,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at SOAS University of London.

Read more analysis from CNN’s Ben Westcott and Steven Jiang here.

How people are trying to end the India-Pakistan crisis one tweet at a time

As tensions between India and Pakistan continue to simmer, some people are trying to build bridges and dialogue between the two neighboring countries. 

“Let’s trend the hashtag #SayNoToWar. We don’t want more lives to be snuffed out. We want peace. War has never solved any problem. It never will. Thanks,” Kashmiri journalist Sagrika Kissu wrote on Tuesday, two days before Pakistan announced that the captured Indian pilot would be released.

After being picked up by celebrities from both countries, politicians, rights group and regular users, the hashtag began trending worldwide and was among the top trends in India and Pakistan before becoming a Twitter moment.

Read more on that here.

Read more

Pakistan says it shot down two Indian jets
Absent US diplomacy, India and Pakistan stand at the precipice of war
Why being seen as tough on Pakistan helps India’s Modi
Kashmir attack: Why the timing could drive tensions

Read more

Pakistan says it shot down two Indian jets
Absent US diplomacy, India and Pakistan stand at the precipice of war
Why being seen as tough on Pakistan helps India’s Modi
Kashmir attack: Why the timing could drive tensions