INDIA WELCOMES PAKISTAN'S RETURN OF CAPTURED PILOT, AS POWERS URGE DE-ESCALATION
With Pakistan authorities announcing to release captured Indian Air Force
(IAF) pilot Abhinandan Varthaman today, the officer is likely to be brought
back to India through the Wagah-Attari joint check-post.
Indian military officials said on Thursday they welcomed Pakistan’s
planned return of a captured pilot but refused to confirm they would
de-escalate a conflict between the two nuclear powers.
The pilot, identified as Wing Commander Abhinandan, became the human face
of the flare-up over the contested region of Kashmir following the release of
videos showing him being captured and later held in custody.
“We are happy our pilot is being released,” said Air Vice Marshal RGK
Kapoor, at a joint news conference of India’s three armed forces on Thursday
evening.
He did not say when asked by reporters if India considered the return a
de-escalation in the conflict.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan said the pilot would be released on
Friday, to the relief of many Indians, even as his military reported that four
Pakistani civilians had been killed by India firing across the disputed border
in Kashmir.
“As a peace gesture we will be releasing him tomorrow,” Khan told
Pakistan’s parliament on Thursday afternoon. Lawmakers thumped their desks in
response.
“We will celebrate his release tomorrow,” said Vinay Bhardwaj, 34, a
plumber in Nawshera, a border town in Indian-controlled Kashmir. “People are
very happy about that here.”
The United States, China, European Union and other powers have urged
restraint from the two nations, as tensions escalated following a suicide car
bombing that killed at least 40 Indian paramilitary police in Indian-controlled
Kashmir on Feb. 14.
Meanwhile, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh expressed his desire to
receive the IAF pilot after he is freed on Friday.
“Dear @narendramodi ji, I’m touring the border areas of Punjab & I’m
presently in Amritsar. Came to know that @pid_gov has decided to release
#AbhinandanVartaman from Wagha. It will be an honour for me to go and receive
him, as he and his father are alumnus of the NDA as I am,” he said in a tweet.
Dear @narendramodi ji , I’m touring the border areas of Punjab & I’m presently in Amritsar. Came to know that @pid_gov has decided to release #AbhinandanVartaman from Wagha. It will be a honour for me to go and receive him, as he and his father are alumnus of the NDA as I am.— Capt.Amarinder Singh (@capt_amarinder) February 28, 2019
On Tuesday,
India said it hit a training camp for a Pakistan-based group who claimed
responsibility for the suicide attack, and a senior government source told
reporters that 300 militants had been killed.
Pakistan
denies this, saying the attack was a failure and no one died, with bombs
dropped on a largely empty hillside. It denies any militant camp was in the
area. Local people said they had seen no sign of major casualties or
significant damage, with only one man known to have been slightly hurt by the
bombs.
Asked about
the damage caused by Indian warplanes in Tuesday’s air strike, Kapoor said it
was premature to provide details about casualties. But they said they had
“credible” evidence of the damage inflicted on the camp by the air strikes.
“Whatever
we intended to destroy, we did,” he said.
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