Connect with us

Trending

3 years after Pulwama, Jaish leadership still intact and thriving in Pakistan

Published

on

3 years after Pulwama, Jaish leadership still intact and thriving in Pakistan

Three years after the Pulwama terror attack, a joint statement of the four foreign ministers specifically condemned the 2008 Mumbai 26/11 and 2016 Pathankot airbase attacks. The four Quartet partners strongly condemn the use of terrorist proxies for cross-border terrorism and demand that the perpetrators of terrorist attacks be brought to justice. The 26/11 terrorist attack was the Pathankot attack by the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terrorist groups. Both Punjab-based groups have deep ties to the deep state in Pakistan, and their only goal is to target India in the name of Kashmir and to radicalize the Indian hinterland through local proxies.

While Minister QUAD did not name Pakistan as Mumbai and Pathankot, the Pulwama attack on 14 February 2019 was JeM’s multinational terror factory in Bahawalpur, Pakistan, run by brothers Masood, Rauf and Ammar Alvi The last major attack. The attack led Narendra Modi’s government to retaliate against Jem by destroying his terror camp in Jabatop, Balakot, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Pakistan, February 26, 2019 . Although the exact number of terrorists killed in Balakot is not known, more than 300 religious militants were found at the training camp the day before the attack, according to high-resolution photos taken inside the camp.

Post Pulwama attack, the Indian security forces and the Jammu and Kashmir police got into action and to date, eight terrorists including the Pulwama suicide bomber have been neutralized, seven have been arrested and are facing trial in the NIA court in Jammu. Former Pulwama resident and now a Jaish operative based in Occupied Kashmir, Ashiq Nengroo, and the infamous Alvi brothers are still to face Indian justice.

Advertisement

While the Modi government has been focusing on Pakistan-based terror groups since 2014, the JeM and LeT terror factories are running at full speed and inspired by the path shown by the Taliban, which devalued and eventually forced the then US-led multinational force Leaving Afghanistan after two decades of fighting. Although the Taliban still wants to control Afghanistan, its rise has led to increased confidence levels among local jihadists in Pakistan and India. Islamic radicalization is on the rise in the Indian subcontinent as well as in other parts of the world.

Masood Azhar-led JeM has been targeting India since its formation in 1999 after IC-814 hijacked Kandahar, a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan launch a major attack. The Ayodhya temple succeeded, it would cause huge community fires and tear apart the fabric of society. This is exactly what the deep state in Pakistan is aiming for and the production target of operating terror factories in Muridek, Lahore and Bahawalpur.

Complete News Source : Hindustan Times

Advertisement

Stocks Market

Stock market in red amid India’s diplomatic action against Pakistan

Published

on

By

Stock market in red amid India’s diplomatic action against Pakistan

The stock market opened in red on Thursday, with the Sensex trading below 187.91 points and the Nifty below 46.45 points. The 30-share Sensex rose by 520.90 points or 0.65% to settle at 80,116.49, the highest closing level since December 18. Eight of the 13 major sectors declined at the open, while the broader, more domestically focused small-caps and mid-caps traded flat.

Ajay Bagga, market expert, said that the overhang remains for the next 10 to 15 days, the time it took in the previous two instances from the terrorist strike to the retaliatory Uri and Balakot strikes. On Wednesday, stock markets extended their surge to the seventh day, with Sensex share jumping 520 points to close above 80,000 level for the first time in four months.

Advertisement

The stock market closed in green for the 7th day on Wednesday, with the 30-share Sensex rising by 520.90 points or 0.65% to settle at 80,116.49, the highest closing level since December 18. During the day, it surged by 658.96 points or 0.82 per cent to 80,254.55. The NSE Nifty rallied 161.70 points or 0.67 per cent to 24,328.95. HCL Tech surged the most by 7.72 per.

Cent after posting an 8.1% increase in consolidated net profit at ₹4,307 crore for March quarter 2024-25, mainly on account of large deals with a total contract value of about ₹25,500 crore. Kotak Mahindra Bank, State Bank of India, Axis Bank, ITC, and UltraTech Cement were also among the laggards, according to PTI Both the Sensex and Nifty reversed their seven-day.

Uptrend and settled lower on Thursday, amid profit-taking and disappointing Q4 earnings of Hindustan Unilever. Selling in blue-chips ICICI Bank, Bharti Airtel, and a largely muted trend in Asian and European equities also dragged the markets down, PTI reported. In the past seven trading days, the BSE benchmark gauge zoomed 6,269.34 points or 8.48 per cent, and the Nifty.

jumped 1,929.8 points or 8.61 per cent ​Indian stock markets experienced significant declines on April 25, 2025, amid escalating geopolitical tensions with Pakistan following a deadly militant attack in Pahalgam, Kashmir, which resulted in 26 civilian deaths. The BSE Sensex fell by 1,195 points during intraday trading, closing 570.8 points lower at 79,227, while the NSE.

Advertisement

The market downturn was driven by widespread losses across sectors, with 12 out of 13 major indices ending in the red. Broader markets were also affected, as mid-cap and small-cap Nifty50 dropped 207.3 points to settle at 24,039 indices declined over 2%. Investor sentiment was further dampened by India’s strong diplomatic response to the attack, which included.

suspending the Indus Waters Treaty, closing the Attari border crossing, and revoking visa privileges for Pakistani nationals The Indian rupee weakened, closing 0.2% lower at 85.45 against the U.S. dollar, influenced by month-end dollar demand and increased geopolitical uncertainty. Bond yields also rose, reflecting heightened risk aversion among investors

Analysts caution that the ongoing tensions between India and Pakistan could continue to impact market stability. While a full-scale conflict is considered unlikely, the situation remains fluid, and investors are advised to monitor developments closely In Pakistan, the Karachi Stock Exchange’s KSE-100 index fell by 2.12%, or 2,485.85 points, as investors reacted to India’s.

The United Nations has urged both nations to exercise restraint and resolve their differences through peaceful dialogue diplomatic measures and the suspension of the Indus Waters Treaty Indian stock markets slipped into the red on April 25, 2025, following India’s strong diplomatic actions against Pakistan after a deadly terrorist attack in Kashmir. The BSE Sensex.

Advertisement
  • Group Media Publication
  1. Construction, Infrastructure and Mining   
  2. General News Platforms – IHTLive.com
  3. Entertainment News Platforms – https://anyflix.in/

Continue Reading
Anyskill-ads

Facebook

Trending