The Prague Post - Pakistan shoots down 25 Indian drones near military installations

EUR -
AED 4.32907
AFN 81.325265
ALL 96.646938
AMD 450.928259
ANG 2.110205
AOA 1080.794091
ARS 1737.42607
AUD 1.780998
AWG 1.657435
AZN 2.005441
BAM 1.948386
BBD 2.374973
BDT 143.508194
BGN 1.955808
BHD 0.44446
BIF 3468.089935
BMD 1.17862
BND 1.508168
BOB 8.148065
BRL 6.253407
BSD 1.179218
BTN 103.839319
BWP 16.774314
BYN 3.994617
BYR 23100.955898
BZD 2.371596
CAD 1.625524
CDF 3328.423579
CHF 0.93431
CLF 0.028709
CLP 1126.242468
CNY 8.383999
CNH 8.378587
COP 4589.84171
CRC 594.141735
CUC 1.17862
CUP 31.233435
CVE 110.642954
CZK 24.308865
DJF 209.464108
DKK 7.463937
DOP 73.369053
DZD 152.50103
EGP 56.799472
ERN 17.679303
ETB 168.775039
FJD 2.671971
FKP 0.862725
GBP 0.869757
GEL 3.184413
GGP 0.862725
GHS 14.461725
GIP 0.862725
GMD 87.218056
GNF 10208.02958
GTQ 9.032668
GYD 246.664549
HKD 9.167261
HNL 30.832735
HRK 7.532442
HTG 154.293548
HUF 389.311803
IDR 19537.397727
ILS 3.94262
IMP 0.862725
INR 103.962965
IQD 1543.992461
IRR 49575.716061
ISK 143.202562
JEP 0.862725
JMD 189.210032
JOD 0.83558
JPY 174.444015
KES 152.632113
KGS 103.070552
KHR 4722.730576
KMF 492.663421
KPW 1060.736762
KRW 1636.714441
KWD 0.359797
KYD 0.982669
KZT 637.955205
LAK 25511.234621
LBP 105545.438628
LKR 356.204596
LRD 210.089115
LSL 20.449312
LTL 3.480159
LVL 0.712935
LYD 6.358681
MAD 10.613501
MDL 19.497973
MGA 5262.539159
MKD 61.297794
MMK 2474.407304
MNT 4240.305235
MOP 9.446575
MRU 47.084836
MUR 53.344676
MVR 18.035563
MWK 2044.745504
MXN 21.649191
MYR 4.956109
MZN 75.307132
NAD 20.448931
NGN 1762.662059
NIO 43.279204
NOK 11.639741
NPR 166.142511
NZD 2.001551
OMR 0.453169
PAB 1.179223
PEN 4.106371
PGK 4.942004
PHP 67.432373
PKR 331.788231
PLN 4.260806
PYG 8396.122912
QAR 4.291061
RON 5.06928
RSD 117.121854
RUB 98.124754
RWF 1701.927567
SAR 4.42057
SBD 9.660984
SCR 17.940644
SDG 708.95334
SEK 11.019486
SGD 1.511105
SHP 0.92621
SLE 27.464721
SLL 24715.08058
SOS 673.608557
SRD 44.948451
STD 24395.058492
STN 24.721559
SVC 10.317914
SYP 15324.174222
SZL 20.449241
THB 37.59413
TJS 11.055075
TMT 4.125171
TND 3.404739
TOP 2.760447
TRY 48.797938
TTD 7.999594
TWD 35.506525
TZS 2917.084885
UAH 48.658374
UGX 4129.287531
USD 1.17862
UYU 47.160548
UZS 14555.95947
VES 192.637038
VND 31097.893948
VUV 139.650082
WST 3.1204
XAF 653.473223
XAG 0.028241
XAU 0.000324
XCD 3.18528
XCG 2.125222
XDR 0.813072
XOF 651.777548
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.220577
ZAR 20.441717
ZMK 10608.996666
ZMW 27.788497
ZWL 379.515223
  • RBGPF

    -0.6700

    76.6

    -0.87%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    24.33

    -0.37%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    16.98

    +1.47%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.55

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -1.1600

    69.99

    -1.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    15.32

    +0.46%

  • AZN

    -0.6200

    77.07

    -0.8%

  • GSK

    -0.0600

    40.3

    -0.15%

  • RIO

    -1.0100

    61.98

    -1.63%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    54.92

    -2.02%

  • RELX

    0.5200

    47.61

    +1.09%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    11.43

    -2.01%

  • BCC

    1.0600

    81.52

    +1.3%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.83

    -0.14%

  • BP

    0.2600

    34.56

    +0.75%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    23.1

    -1.69%

Pakistan shoots down 25 Indian drones near military installations
Pakistan shoots down 25 Indian drones near military installations / Photo: Tauseef MUSTAFA - AFP

Pakistan shoots down 25 Indian drones near military installations

Pakistan's army said Thursday it shot down 25 Indian drones, a day after the worst violence between the nuclear-armed rivals in two decades.

Text size:

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to retaliate after India launched deadly missile strikes on Wednesday morning, escalating days of gunfire along their border.

At least 45 deaths were reported from both sides following Wednesday's violence, including children.

Pakistan's military said in a statement Thursday that it had "so far shot down 25 Israeli-made Harop drones" at multiple location across the country.

"Last night, India showed another act of aggression by sending drones to multiple locations," Pakistan's military spokesman Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said from the army's headquarters in Rawalpindi, where a drone was downed.

"One managed to engage in a military target near Lahore," he said, adding that four troops in the city were injured.

He earlier said the operation was ongoing.

One civilian was killed and another injured in Sindh as a result of the drone incidents.

Crowds gathered at crash sites, some close to army installations, to gaze at the debris.

Blasts could be heard across Lahore.

The Civil Aviation Authority said Karachi airport was closed until 6 pm (1300 GMT), while Islamabad and Lahore were briefly shut "for operational reasons".

Pakistan and Indian have fought several wars over the Muslim-majority disputed region of Kashmir -- divided between the two but claimed in full by both.

"We will avenge each drop of the blood of these martyrs," Sharif said, in an address to the nation.

- 'Right to respond' -

Speaking after the Wednesday missile strike, India's Defence Minister Rajnath Singh said New Delhi had a "right to respond" following an attack on tourists in Pahalgam in Kashmir last month, when gunmen killed 26 people, mainly Hindu men.

New Delhi blamed the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba -- a UN-designated terrorist organisation for the Pahalgam shooting, and the nations traded days of threats and diplomatic measures.

Pakistan has denied any involvement and called for an independent investigation into the April 22 attack.

India said on Wednesday it had destroyed nine "terrorist camps" in Pakistan in "focused, measured and non-escalatory" strikes.

Islamabad said Wednesday that 31 civilians were killed by Indian strikes and firing along the border.

New Delhi said 13 civilians and a soldier had been killed by Pakistani fire.

Pakistan's military also said five Indian jets had been downed across the border, but New Delhi has not responded to the claims.

An Indian senior security source, who asked not to be named, said three of its fighter jets had crashed on home territory.

- 'Screamed' -

The largest Indian strike was on an Islamic seminary near the Punjabi city of Bahawalpur, killing 13 people according to the Pakistan military.

Muhammad Riaz said he and his family had been made homeless after Indian strikes hit Muzaffarabad, the main city of Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

"There is no place to live," he said. "There is no space at the house of our relatives. We are very upset, we have nowhere to go."

On the Indian side of the frontier on Wednesday, Madasar Choudhary, 29, described how his sister saw two children killed in Poonch, where Pakistan military carried out shelling.

"She saw two children running out of her neighbour's house and screamed for them to get back inside," Choudhary said, narrating her account because she was too shocked to speak.

"But shrapnel hit the children -- and they eventually died."

- 'No pushover' -

India on Thursday braced for Pakistan's threatened retaliation.

In an editorial on Thursday, the Indian Express wrote "there is no reason to believe that the Pakistan Army has been chastened by the Indian airstrikes", adding that Indian military experts were "aware that Pakistan's armed forces are no pushover".

"Border districts on high alert," The Hindu newspaper headline read, adding that "India must be prepared for escalatory action" by Pakistan.

Diplomats and world leaders have pressured both countries to step back from the brink.

"I want to see them stop," US President Donald Trump said Wednesday.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is slated to meet his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar on Thursday in New Delhi, days after visiting Pakistan, as Tehran seeks to mediate.

Analysts said they were fully expecting Pakistani military action to "save face" in a response to India.

"India's limited objectives are met," said Happymon Jacob, director of the New Delhi-based think tank Council for Strategic and Defence Research.

"Pakistan has a limited objective of ensuring that it carries out a retaliatory strike to save face domestically and internationally. So, that is likely to happen."

Based on past conflicts, he believed it would "likely end in a few iterations of exchange of long-range gunfire or missiles into each other's territory".

burs-pjm/ecl/lb

W.Cejka--TPP