Holywood News

Pakistani forces violate JK's LOC ceasefire

Pakistani troops continued to continue unprovoked shooting at different departments of Jamu and Kashmir's Line of Control (LOC), officials said on Sunday, prompting Indian troops to retaliate effectively. Officials said a ceasefire in Pakistan reportedly violated five locations in Pakistan on Saturday and Sunday nights, but no casualties were reported. This was a rise in tensions following the terrorist attacks in Pahalgam on April 22, shooting from the Jamu and Kashmir border for the 10th night in a row, killing 26 people, mostly tourists, and dead.
On the evening of May 3-4, Pakistani army outposts resorted to places in Kupwara, Baramulla, Baramulla, Poonch, Rajouri, Rajouri, Mendhar, Naushera, Naushera, Naushera, Naushera and Akhn, at JK.
Ceasefire violations along the LIC and International Borders (IB) are very rare since India and Pakistan renewed the Ceasefire Agreement on February 25, 2021.

Preventive measures have been taken, and panicked villagers have begun cleaning communities and individual bunkers to make them habitable.


Since the evening of April 24, Pakistani forces have been shooting unprovoked everywhere in the LOC of JK starting from the Kashmir Valley. Initially, Pakistan opened fire along several pillars in Kupwara and Baramulla areas in North Kashmir, Pakistan quickly expanded its ceasefire violation to the Poonch department and then to the Akhnoor department in Chamu area. Next were small arms launched on several pillars of the LOC of the Sunderbani and Naushera departments in the Rajouri district. The fire then expanded to the international borders of Mendhar in Poonch and Pargwal in Jamu district.

Despite a hotline conversation between the recent Indian Military Operation (DGMO) and Pakistani directors, new ceasefire violations are still underway, during which India has been learned to warn Pakistan.

On April 24, Pakistan blocked the airspace of Indian Airlines, closed the Wagah border crossing, suspended all trade with India, and warned that any attempt to transfer water would be considered an “act of war.”

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