Pakistan prepares to return Indian pilot
as confrontation cools
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[March 01, 2019]
By Alasdair Pal and James Mackenzie
NEW DELHI/ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan
prepared to release a captured Indian pilot on Friday as the nuclear
powers scaled back their confrontation, at least temporarily, while
Indian opposition politicians raised doubts over whether an initial
airstrike had destroyed a militant camp in Pakistan.
World 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.
The United States has been actively mediating, to avert any risk of the
two countries sliding toward their fourth war since independence from
British colonial rule in 1947. The disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir
has been at the root of two of those conflicts.
Both governments claimed they downed enemy jets on Wednesday, with
Pakistan capturing an Indian pilot whose MiG fighter jet crashed in
enemy territory after dogfight with a Pakistani JF-17.
The pilot, who India named on Thursday as Wing Commander Abhinandan, has
become the human face of the most recent conflict between the two
nations. Having attempted to evade capture, he is being portrayed as a
hero in India.
Abhinandan is expected be returned at the Wagah border crossing between
the two countries on Friday afternoon, Pakistan's foreign minister Shah
Mahmood Qureshi said.
"As a gesture of peace and to de-escalate matters, the Indian pilot who
is under arrest with us will be released today in the afternoon at the
Wagah border," he told lawmakers.
Firing along the contested border dividing Kashmir eased on Friday. But
diplomatic relations between the two countries remain strained.
Qureshi said he would not attend a meeting of foreign ministers from the
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation in Abu Dhabi this weekend, because
his Indian counterpart had been invited to the event.
Qureshi has said the Saudi foreign minister is set to visit Islamabad
with a message from Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, who visited both
Pakistan and India last month.
DARING ESCAPE
Abhinandan's plane came down on Wednesday after a dogfight with a
Pakistani jet, two eyewitnesses told Reuters.
The pilot shouted pro-India slogans, and after realizing he was in enemy
territory, attempted to flee, firing his pistol in the air to deter
Pakistani villagers who were chasing him, the eyewitnesses said.
"During that half a kilometer run, he fired some more gunshots in the
air as well, to frighten the guys but to no avail," said Muhammad Razzaq
Chaudhry, 58, one of the eyewitnesses.
"Then he jumped into a small stream. Then, he realized that he could not
escape, he took out some documents and maps from his uniform and tried
to swallow some, tear apart and immerse the rest."
Abdul Majeed, 40, said he was one of a number of villagers who had
beaten and thrown stones at the pilot.
"While in the stream he once again pointed his revolver at us and
fearing that he may shoot directly at us, I threw a stone at him," he
said.
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Indian pilot Wing Commander Abhi Nandan captured by Pakistan is seen
in this handout photo released February 27, 2019. Inter Service
Public Relation (ISPR) Handout via REUTERS
"Some of us did thrash him... because he had given us a tough time.
But later we handed him over to the army personnel."
MILITANT CLAIMS
The conflict comes at a critical time for India's Prime Minister
Narendra Modi, who faces a general election that must be held by
May.
Modi is expected to benefit from the nationalist pride unleashed by
his government's announcement on Tuesday that Indian warplanes had
destroyed a major training camp of Jaish-e Mohammad, the militant
group that claimed responsibility for the Feb. 14 attack.
But there were growing calls from opposition parties for more
information about just how successful the mission was.
India's Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale had said the strike killed
"a very large number" member of the group, and another senior
government official told reporters that about 300 militants had been
killed, but New Delhi had still to provide evidence to support that
assessment.
Pakistan says the Indian planes missed whatever they were aiming at,
and that no-one died in the attack outside Balakot, , a small town
in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Villagers on the outskirts of Balakot told Reuters one of their
neighbors was wounded during the attack, but there were no other
casualties and the Indian bombs caused negligible damage, although
there was a madrasa run by Jaish nearby.
On Thursday, Mamata Banerjee, one of the main leaders of an Indian
opposition coalition attempting to unseat Modi, requested more
information about the attack.
"We have the right to know how many people died in the air strike
and who were they," she said.
"We want to know the actual incident as we have not received any
details."
Amit Shah, the president of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party and one of
its most influential figures, sought to dispel any doubt.
"People should decide if they trust India's armed forces or not," he
said at an event on Friday.
"Those who are doubting are helping Pakistan."
(Reporting by Alasdair Pal, James Mackenzie, Saad Sayeed, Abu Arqam
Naqash, Fayaz Bukhari, Shilpa Jamkhandikar and Devjyot Ghoshal;
Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
Date: 03/01/2019 06:24 AM
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