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Fears of attack in Pakistan-administered Kashmir amid acute India tensions | News


More than 1,000 religious schools have been shut and people have begun readying walled bunkers.

Authorities in Pakistan-administered Kashmir have shut more than 1,000 religious schools over fears of possible retaliatory military action from India over last weekโ€™s deadly attack in the disputed region, as tensions soar between the nuclear-armed neighbours.

India blames Pakistan for the gun attack that killed 26 people on April 22 in Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi providing his military โ€œcomplete operational freedomโ€ to deal with it.

Denying any involvement in the attack, Pakistan has said it has โ€œcredible evidenceโ€ that India is now planning an imminent military strike, promising that โ€œany act of aggression will be met with a decisive responseโ€.

Pakistanโ€™s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said in a televised statement early on Wednesday that the attack could take place in the โ€œnext 24 to 36 hoursโ€.

โ€˜Readying underground bunkersโ€™

Fearing a military escalation, authorities have shut more than 1,000 religious schools in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

โ€œWe have announced a 10-day break for all madrassas in Kashmir,โ€ Hafiz Nazeer Ahmed, head of the local religious affairs department told the AFP news agency.

A department source said it was โ€œdue to tensions at the border and the potential for conflictโ€.

About 1.5 million people live near the Line of Control (LoC) in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, where residents are also readying simple, mud-walled underground bunkers โ€“ reinforced with concrete if they can afford it.

โ€œFor one week we have been living in constant fear, particularly concerning the safety of our children,โ€ Iftikhar Ahmad Mir, a 44-year-old shopkeeper in Chakothi near the LoC, told AFP.

โ€œWe make sure they donโ€™t roam around after finishing their school and come straight home.โ€

Emergency services workers in Muzaffarabad, the main city in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, have also begun training schoolchildren on what to do if India attacks.

โ€œWe have learned how to dress a wounded person, how to carry someone on a stretcher and how to put out a fire,โ€ said 11-year-old Ali Raza.

Will India attack?

On Wednesday, Modi chaired a Cabinet Committee on Security meeting, the second such meeting since the Pahalgam attack, the state-run Doordarshan broadcaster reported.

Meanwhile, as the neighbours continued toย exchangeย gunfire along the LoC dividing Indian and Pakistan-administered Kashmir, other world leaders stepped up diplomacy in an attempt to ease spiralling tensions.

India on Wednesday also closed its airspace to Pakistani planes, after Pakistan banned Indian planes from overflying.

Pakistanโ€™s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has urged the United States to press India to โ€œdial down the rhetoric and act responsiblyโ€.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has asked both nations to โ€œde-escalate tensions,โ€ a State Department spokesperson said in a statement on Wednesday.

Rubio โ€œurged Pakistani officialsโ€™ cooperation in investigating this unconscionable attackโ€, according to White House spokesperson Tammy Bruce.

Also on Tuesday, the spokesperson for United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that he had spoken to Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Indian foreign minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, offering his help in โ€œde-escalationโ€.

While it is unclear what course of action India could take, it has in the past used a range of military tactics like covert military operations, publicised surgical strikes, aerial strikes, attempts at taking over Pakistan-controlled land, naval missions and a full-blown military conflict.

India and Pakistan have fought over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir since the violent end of British rule in 1947.

Rebels in the Indian-run area of Kashmir have waged an armed rebellion since 1989, seeking independence or a merger with Pakistan.

The worst attack in recent years in Indian-run Kashmir was at Pulwama in 2019, when a suicide bomber rammed a car packed with explosives into a security forces convoy, killing 40 people and wounding 35.

Indian fighter jets carried out air strikes on Pakistani territory 12 days later.



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