Several explosions have been heard in Indian-controlled Kashmir Jamu City – after Pakistan and Indian Jets fought in recent history “big dog fight”

Several explosions were heard in the city of Jamu, Kashmir, India on the second day of Friday, and projectiles were seen in the night sky after the power outage.
Officials told the Times of India that the incident occurred in response to the Indian air strikes on Pakistani camps.
The newspaper reported seeing Pakistani drones on the controversial border.
Several areas of Kashmir in India, including Chamu, Katua, Samba River, Udhampl, Rajuri and Pornchi, are currently undergoing complete power outages.
Overnight, Indian and Pakistani soldiers exchanged large amounts of shells and gunfire on their border in Kashmir, killing at least five civilians in an increasing military stalemate, which broke out after attacks on tourists in Indian-controlled areas.
Local police officer Adeel Ahmad said in Pakistan, at least four civilians died on an unusually intense night of artillery and injured 12 people near the area where the boundaries were controlled. People in border towns said the fire continued until Friday morning.
“We are used to hearing the fire exchange between Pakistan and India, but it was different last night,” said Mohammad Shakil, who lives near the border of Chakothi industry.
In India, military officials say Pakistani troops attacked their posts with artillery, mortars and gunshots in India-controlled Kashmir. They said Indian soldiers responded, sparking intense exchanges until early dawn.
View of a damaged shop destroyed by Pakistani shelling, they are preparing to evacuate the village of Lagama on May 9, 2025 in Uri, about 100 km from Srinagar
Police said two people were injured in URI and POONCH departments since Wednesday in India-controlled Kashmir and killed civilians to 18 years old in India-controlled Kashmir. Pakistan said Indian mortars and artillery fire killed 17 civilians in Kashmir, which was managed in Pakistan during the same period.
Indian authorities have evacuated tens of thousands of civilians from villages near the volatile border. For the second consecutive night, thousands of people slept in the shelter.
Since tensions among nuclear weapons competitors soared on April 22, Kashmir’s popular ruins in India-controlled Kashmir have killed 26 civilians, mainly Indian tourists. New Delhi blames Pakistan for supporting the attack, accusing Islamabad of refusal.
On Wednesday, India carried out air strikes at several locations in the Pakistani territory, which was linked to militants, killing 31 civilians, according to Pakistani officials. Pakistan said it shot down five Indian fighters.
India said on Thursday that it thwarted Pakistan’s drone and missile strikes among military targets in more than a dozen towns, including the Indian-controlled city of Jamu in Kashmir. Pakistan denies it carried out a drone attack. India said at the same time it attacked Pakistan’s air defense system and radar near the city of Lahore. These events cannot be independently confirmed.
Indian troops said on Friday that Pakistan violated 300-400 drones at nearly thirty locations in the western border in violation of Indian airspace. Vyomika Singh, the wing commander of the Indian Air Force, said at a press conference that India used “dynamic and non-dynamic means” to knock down many drones.
Meanwhile, social platform X said in a statement Thursday that the Indian government has ordered the country’s users to block access to more than 8,000 accounts, including many “international news organizations and other prominent users.”
The social platform did not publish a list of accounts blocked in India, but said the order belongs to censorship of existing and future content, which violates the fundamental right to freedom of expression. Later, X briefly blocked access to the global affairs account that made its statement, and also cited Indian legal requirements.
India’s largest domestic cricket championship, the Indian Premier League, attracted top players from all over the world, and was suspended for a week. Pakistan also handed over its domestic tournament to the United Arab Emirates due to tensions.
Panic also spread in an evening cricket match north of Daramsala, where more than 10,000 people had to be evacuated from the stadium and cancelled, according to an Associated Press photographer covering the event.
Meanwhile, several states in the northern and western India, including Punjab, Rajasthan, Indian-controlled Kashmir, closed schools and other educational institutions for two days.
Indian airlines have also suspended flight operations from 20 airports in the north and west. India’s civil aviation ministry confirmed the temporary closures of 24 airports in a statement late Thursday.
The impact of the border eruption can also be seen in the Indian stock market. In early trade on Friday, the benchmark Sensex rose 662 points to 79,649, while the Nifty 50 traded at 215 points, at 24,058.
As fear of military confrontation soars and fears of world leaders call for relegation, U.S. Vice President JD Vance said the potential war between India and Pakistan would be “our business has nothing to do with it.”
“All we can do is try to encourage these people to lower a little bit, but we won’t be involved in the mid-war period, which is fundamentally nothing to do with us and nothing to do with the ability of the United States to control it,” Vance said in an interview with Fox News.
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