Pakistan Army 'Warns India Against Any Misadventure'
The Pakistan Army on Friday said that if there is an attempt by India to undertake any "misadventure", then its response will be "even stronger than that of February 27", as tensions escalate between the two neighbours following New Delhi's revocation of special status for Jammu and Kashmir.
Islamabad, Aug 9: The Pakistan Army on Friday said that if there is an attempt by India to undertake any "misadventure", then its response will be "even stronger than that of February 27", as tensions escalate between the two neighbours following New Delhi's revocation of special status for Jammu and Kashmir.
"Should there be an attempt by Indian Army to undertake any misadventure, Pakistan's response shall be even stronger than that of Feb 27, 2019," said Pakistan armed forces' media wing Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Director General Asif Ghafoor on Twitter. Article 370 Revoked in Jammu and Kashmir: China Calls on India, Pakistan to Resolve Disputes Through Talks.
"Thousands of Indian troops have failed to suppress just struggle of brave Kashmiris for decades. Current surge won't succeed either," he added.
Indian Air Force pilot Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman was captured in Pakistan on February 27 after his MIG-21 Bison fighter jet was shot down during an aerial dogfight between the Indian Air Force and the Pakistan Air Force near the Line of Control (LoC). He was later released by Islamabad as a "goodwill gesture".
Ghafoor also dismissed a statement by the Indian Chinar Corps commander - in which he accused Pakistan of being "involved in disrupting the peace in Kashmir Valley" - as "usual blatant lies".
Earlier, Chinar Corps Commander Lt. Gen. Kanwal Jeet Singh Dhillon, during an interaction with reporters, was asked if he thought Pakistan would "increase their attempts to try and spoil the law and order situation in the valley".
He replied: "The Pakistan Army and Pakistan have always been involved in disrupting the peace in Kashmir Valley. So I would like to believe that they are good enough to do it and recently there's been statements which have come up in which they are openly threatening about certain incidents in the valley.
"Notwithstanding we will take care of all of them, let anyone come and try and disrupt the peace in valley, we will have him eliminated."
Ghafoor termed Dhillon's statement as "an attempt to carve out casus belli for a misadventure to divert world attention from precarious situation and atrocities in (Indian occupied Jammu and Kashmir)".
"Casus belli" is a Latin expression meaning "an act or event that provokes or is used to justify war".
He said that while "the Indian occupied Kashmir was facing a media blackout, Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) was open to the foreign media and the UN Military Observers group in India and Pakistan could visit places of their choice in AJK".
"Can you do the same?" he asked Lt. Gen. Dhillon.
A day earlier, Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan had said that Islamabad "does not want war", however, "if India imposes, then it will give a befitting response".
The cricketer-turned-politician said that Pakistan will take the issue of "Indian violence against Kashmiris to the UN".
He said that the international community "will be apprised of the Indian tactics, such as ethnic cleansing and plans to change demography of occupied Kashmir".
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi also said on Thursday that Islamabad was not looking at military option in the row with India over Kashmir.
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Aug 09, 2019 02:47 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).