Islamabad - Nuclear-armed Pakistan and India both carried out aerial bombing missions last week
Published: Mon 4 Mar 2019, 9:00 PM
Updated: Mon 4 Mar 2019, 11:20 PM
Pakistan plans to take action against militant groups operating on its soil, a minister said on Monday, amid global pressure to act after a suicide bomber killed 40 Indian paramilitary police in Jammu and Kashmir last month.
But Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry denied Indian accusations that Pakistan was involved in the February 14 attack, which led to a sharp rise in hostilities, saying it "had nothing to do with us".
Nuclear-armed Pakistan and India both carried out aerial bombing missions last week and on Wednesday fought a brief dogfight in the skies, but they stepped back from the brink after Islamabad on Friday handed back a captured Indian pilot as a peace gesture.
Britain and the United States welcomed the pilot's return but urged Islamabad to take action against militant groups carrying out attacks on Indian soil. Islamabad denies assisting the groups or using them as proxies in its rivalry with India.
Chaudhry said the decision to act was taken at a meeting of the National Security Committee before the suicide bombing, claimed by Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), in Kashmir. "A full-fledged strategy is now in place," Chaudhry said. "We have different strategies for different groups, but the main aim is that we have to enforce the writ of the state. We have to demilitarise if there are groups (on our soil)."
Pakistan's English-language Dawn newspaper said a source briefed journalists that a crackdown against militant groups was imminent. "The action would soon be visible as things progress," Dawn cited the source as saying. It did not identify the source or say whether it was from the military or government.