India, Pakistan and Kashmir
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Al Jazeera on MSN‘Who suffered the most?’: Fear and fatigue in Kashmir after ceasefireThe region, which faced the brunt of the India-Pakistan military escalation, limps back to life. But questions remain.
A series of military strikes last week by India and Pakistan brought the nuclear-armed rivals closer to a broader war.
Minister for Information and Broadcasting Attaullah Tarar says recent ceasefire between Pakistan and India is a result of the diplomatic efforts of different countries. In an interview with Sky News, he said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif expressed his gratitude to President Donald Trump, who played a pivotal role in the ceasefire.
India said its long-standing position on Kashmir has been that it is a bilateral issue between New Delhi and Islamabad and there is no change of this stand.
As the dust settles after a series of Pakistani escalations and Indian military responses during Operation Sindoor, the focus now shifts to what really went down on the day the dramatic ceasefire was announced.
Only some TV anchors in faraway Noida and Mumbai don’t like the ceasefire. People near the border want it,” say J&K CM Omar Abdullah, rival Mehbooba, as Congress claims Govt missed "golden opportunity" to teach Pak a lesson.
SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah Tuesday said the ceasefire between India and Pakistan must remain intact as people on the border want to live in peace. "We all want the ceasefire to remain intact.
India's position on Jammu and Kashmir - the return of territory illegally occupied by Pakistan - has not changed, the External Affairs Ministry said Tuesday, underlining what Prime Minister Narendra Modi said 24 hours earlier.