Tag: Pakistan

  • Pakistan rejects as ‘baseless’ Indian stand of downing F-16 aircraft in February 2019

    By PTI

    ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday rejected as “baseless” the Indian stand that a Pakistani F-16 aircraft was shot down by an Indian pilot during an aerial combat in February 2019.

    Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman (now Group Captain) shot down the Pakistani F-16 jet during an aerial combat before his MiG 21 Bison aircraft was hit on February 27, 2019.

    He was captured by the Pakistani Army and later released on the night of March 1.

    He was conferred with the Vir Chakra award by President Ram Nath Kovind on Monday for displaying an “exceptional sense of duty” in the dogfight.

    Vir Chakra is India’s third-highest wartime gallantry award after Param Vir Chakra and Maha Vir Chakra.

    “Pakistan categorically rejects the entirely baseless Indian claims that a Pakistani F-16 aircraft was shot down by an Indian pilot” in February 2019, the Foreign Office said in a statement.

    “The international experts and US officials have already confirmed that no Pakistani F-16 was shot down on the day, after taking stock of Pakistani F-16 aircraft,” it claimed.

    The pilot’s release “was a testimony of Pakistan’s desire for peace despite India’s hostility and ill-conceived aggressive action,” it added.

    In the early hours of February 26, 2019, the IAF jets bombed the Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) terror camps in Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa of Pakistan and avenged the Pulwama terrorist attack that claimed the lives of 40 CRPF personnel.

    An intense aerial confrontation ensued between both countries the next day, in which the Indian pilot was captured and later released by Pakistan.

    The strike by India’s warplanes on a JeM terrorist training camp in Balakot and the Pakistan Air Force’s subsequent retaliation the next day triggered fears of a war between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.

  • Navjot Singh Sidhu bats for trade, ‘new friendship chapter’ between India & Pakistan as he visits Kartarpur

    By PTI

    LAHORE: Punjab Congress chief Navjot Singh Sidhu on Saturday visited the revered Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan and offered prayers and stressed on “opening of a new friendship chapter” and trade between the two countries, days after India reopened the visa-free Kartarpur corridor for Sikh pilgrims.

    The Kartarpur corridor links Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan, the final resting place of Sikhism founder Guru Nanak Dev, with the Dera Baba Nanak shrine in Gurdaspur district in India’s Punjab state.

    The 4 km-long corridor provides visa free access to Indian Sikh pilgrims to visit the Darbar Sahib.

    Pilgrimage to the Kartarpur Sahib gurdwara was suspended in March last year because of the Covid-19 outbreak.

    The Kartarpur corridor was reopened on Tuesday for pilgrims.

    “In the name of Baba Guru Nanak, a new chapter of friendship between the two countries should begin,” Sidhu told journalists upon his arrival at the Kartarpur Sahib.

    “After the World wars in which millions of people lost their lives, if Europe can open borders on one-visa, has one passport and one currency, why not in this region of ours where we have figures like Bhagat Singh and Maharaja Ranjeet Singh who are revered by everyone?” he asked.

    Sidhu said he wants mutual love between India and Pakistan.

    “There is a need to open windows in the walls erected in 74 years (between India and Pakistan),” he said, stressing on opening of trade between the two countries.

    “There should be trade between two countries,” the cricketer-turned-politician said.

    Sidhu thanked Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan for taking a step to open the corridor.

    “I am thankful to PM (Imran Khan) for taking the first step and on the other side (India) responded with two steps. I had already said that those favouring the ‘laanga’ (corridor) would have blessings and those opposing it had no value,” he said.

    When Kartarpur Corridor Project Management Unit CEO Muhammad Latif welcomed the former Test cricketer at the zero point and extended best wishes to him and his delegation on behalf of the prime minister, Sidhu said: “Imran Khan is my elder brother. I am greatly honoured. He (Khan) gave us a lot of love.”

    Sidhu visited the complex and also offered religious rituals.

    He and his delegation members were offered ‘langar’ (food) made from the wheat and vegetables of the fields, which Guru Nanak Dev used to look after.

    According to Latif, over 300 Indian Sikhs visited the Kartarpur Sahib on Saturday the fourth day of the reopening of the route which was suspended for some 20 months following the Covid.

    Earlier this week, Punjab Chief Minister Charanjit Singh Channi along with 37 others, including his Cabinet ministers, and Jagir Kaur, president of the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), had visited the Gurdwara Darbar Sahib.

    Some 2,500 Indian Sikhs who have come to Pakistan via Wagah border on the occasion of the 552 birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev will also visit the Darbar Sahib.

    In November 2019, Prime Minister Khan formally inaugurated the Kartarpur Corridor as part of commemoration of the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak at a colourful ceremony, paving the way for Indian Sikh pilgrims to visit one of their religion’s holiest sites in Pakistan without needing a visa.

  • Hackers from Delhi reportedly launching cyberattacks against China, Pakistan

    By IANS

    NEW DELHI: A new report published by Antiy Labs, one of China’s cybersecurity companies, disclosed an active hacker team whose members are based in Delhi and has been launching cyberattacks against the government agencies and defence departments in China and Pakistan, Global Times reported.

    The report conducted a comprehensive analysis of the cyberattacks launched by the organisation called You Xiang (baby elephant in English) in South Asia, revealing its target, technology and equipment, and exposing the attackers who wear “invisible clothes” and hide behind screens.

    The company’s vice chief engineer, Li Bosong, told the Global Times that they first detected “baby elephant” activities in 2017, when a number of large-scale targeted cyberattacks on the government, military and defence departments of South Asian countries were found.

    According to the analysis of their activities, it was found that the group is suspected to be from India, and is not the same as another hacker group from India named “white elephant.”

    The organisation had its own set of relatively independent attack resources and tools, but the attack capability was relatively primary at that time. It might be a newly established attack team with immature technical capabilities. “That’s why we’ve named this new, advanced threat organisation ‘baby elephant,’” Li said, as per the report.

    Four years since, the “baby elephant” is on the rampage, expanding their targets. “Since 2017, the number of ‘baby elephant’ attacks has doubled each year, and the attack methods and resources have gradually become richer, and the target has started to cover more areas in South Asia,” Li said. “In 2021, the group began targeted attacks on Chinese institutions for intelligence theft.”

    The attacks detected by Antiy Labs include setting up phishing websites, attacking mobile phones with malicious Android applications, and Trojans written in languages such as Python to steal various documents, browser cache passwords and other host system environment information from computers, the report said.

    For example, the “baby elephant” used to disguise itself as the mail system of the Nepalese Army, police, and government, including Nepal’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of National Defence, and the Prime Minister’s office to launch targeted attacks to obtain email accounts to carry out subsequent attacks.

    It also pretended to be a polling app for India-Nepal territorial disputes using malicious Android applications. After the victim installs and opens the malicious Android application, the application will ask for system permissions from users. If the permissions are granted, it will monitor the victim’s mobile phone, Global Times reported.

    The highlight from the report is that the location of those hackers was exposed when the group uploaded their Trojan horses to public security resources to test the ability of the Trojan horses to escape anti-virus software. Resources retrieval showed at least one sample uploader was from Delhi, India. The hacker had uploaded eight test malicious files from November 23 to November 24, 2020, the report said. Those samples shared a high degree of similarity in code content with those from the “baby elephant.”

    Judging from previous activities, some hacking organisations from India are not very concealed. One is because of its imperfect attacking capability, but more importantly, it reflects the have-nothing-to-fear mindset of those attackers. The physical location of one attacker most likely represents the location of the entire hacking organization, Li said.

    “Despite constantly diversifying attacking methods and more abundant functions of the malicious files, attacks could still be traced to the “baby elephant” based on its targets, tactics and decoys and Trojan homology,” Li said.

    The targets of the attacks overlap, such as those in Nepal, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. Techniques and tactics that they used are similar to the behaviour of the “baby elephant” in the early stage, including malicious shortcuts, malicious HTA scripts and Python Trojan horses, according to Li.

    Li also pointed out the similarity of their domain names, which all tend to imitate the official domain names of government organs and state-owned enterprises in Pakistan, Nepal and Sri Lanka. They also tended to adopt the dynamic domain names under the US network service provider No-IP, such as hopto.org and myftp.org, the report added.

    Multiple signs showed that the “baby elephant” has already become one of the most active and mature cyberattack organisations that threaten the cybersecurity of South Asia and Asia-Pacific.

    It is also likely to become the main attack group in South Asia in the future, Li said, calling for attention to be paid on the “baby elephant.”

    Victim countries attacked by the “baby elephant” are usually weak economically, in digital maintenance and cybersecurity capabilities. But like any other country, they enjoy the right to defend their sovereignty, security and interests, Li pointed out.

    In a previous interview, Antiy Labs told the Global Times that since March, they have detected several phishing activities targeting the government, defence and military units, as well as state-owned enterprises in China, Pakistan, and Nepal. The organisation behind the attacks is from India and its activities can be traced to as early as April 2019.

    Global Times reported that the material obtained from several of China’s leading cybersecurity companies have further revealed a sophisticated network: top hackers from South Asia, mainly from India, have constantly attacked defence and military units as well as state-owned enterprises in China, Nepal and Pakistan in the past few years, and such attacks are on the rise under new disguises of international trending topics.

  • No certificate needed from country setting records in atrocities against minorities: Naqvi slams Pakistan

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Union Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi on Thursday described as a “nefarious campaign” the reported allegations by Pakistan over Muslims’ Friday congregational prayers in Gurgaon, and said no certificate is needed from a country which is setting records in “atrocities against minorities”.

    Naqvi asserted that for Indian Muslims, India is the “best and safest” place in the world.

    He dismissed the allegations as a “nefarious, misleading and criminal campaign” by the Pakistani establishment against India.

    “It is a fake agenda of the Bharat bashing brigade,” the minority affairs minister told PTI.

    Slamming Pakistan, Naqvi pointed out that as of today, there are three lakh active mosques in India which are registered with Waqf boards and the administration.

    There are many more places where prayers are performed by Muslims, he added.

    The number of active mosques and prayer places in India is more than in any other country in the world, including Islamic nations, Naqvi said.

    As far as Pakistan is concerned, there were about 5,000 temples at the time of partition and today there are not even 30 active temples there, the minister said, adding that the same is the situation with respect to churches and gurdwaras.

    As far as population is concerned, at the time of partition, the population of minorities in Pakistan was more than 24 per cent and now it is less than 2 per cent, Naqvi said.

    In India, at the time of partition, the population of minorities was about eight per cent and now it is more than 20 per cent, he said.

    Naqvi asserted that in India minorities have equal share in development of the country and in empowerment that is taking place.

    Economically and educationally all communities have equal opportunities and also have an equal share in progress and prosperity, he said.

    Be it ‘namaz’ or other religious activities, they are constitutionally safeguarded in India, he said.

    “It is laughable that those sitting in the jungle of atrocities are preaching the biggest secular and democratic country in the world,” Naqvi said.

    “No certificate is needed from a country which is setting records in atrocities against minorities,” he said, hitting out at Pakistan.

    His remarks came a day after the Dawn News quoted a Pakistan Foreign Office statement as raising concerns over alleged “restrictions” on Friday prayers by Muslims in Gurgaon.

    The statement also alleged that Muslims were being targeted and cited recent incidents in Maharashtra and Tripura.

    Naqvi said the Hindu culture is the guarantee of secularism and inclusivity.

  • Pakistan’s top Sikh body welcomes India’s decision to reopen Kartarpur Corridor

    By PTI

    LAHORE: Pakistan’s top Sikh body and the Evacuee Trust Property Board (ETPB) on Tuesday welcomed the Indian government’s decision to reopen the Kartarpur Corridor, saying it will help Indian Sikhs to visit the last abode of Sikhism founder Guru Nanak Dev without any hindrance.

    India on Tuesday announced the reopening of the Kartarpur Corridor from Wednesday.

    The corridor links Gurdwara Darbar Sahib in Pakistan, the final resting place of Guru Nanak Dev, to Dera Baba Nanak shrine in Punjab’s Gurdaspur district.

    The announcement to restart the pilgrimage that was suspended since March 2020 following the COVID-19 outbreak came three days before the birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev on Friday.

    “We welcome the Indian government’s decision, which should have been taken a long ago. The decision will provide Sikhs from Indian Punjab an opportunity to visit the Gurdwara Kartarpur where Baba Nanak had spent the last 18 years of his life,” Pakistan Sikh Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (PSGPC) Pardhan (president) Sardar Ameer Singh told PTI.

    “It is the basic right of the Sikhs to come to their holy places in Pakistan,” he said.

    Singh further said the corridor should not be dragged into politics.

    “A message of love and harmony should go from here. This will help reduce tension and improve ties between the two countries in days to come,” he said.

    The bilateral relations between India and Pakistan have been affected badly over the Kashmir issue.

    Singh said the PSGPC would host some 3,000 Sikhs due here on Wednesday in connection with the birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev.

    “We can facilitate as many pilgrims at the corridor crossing over here from India,” he said, adding that the corridor will bring the people of both countries closer one day.

    The ETPB, which looks after the holy places of minorities in Pakistan, also welcomed the decision of reopening the corridor.

    “We had been anticipating this decision long ago, but nonetheless it’s never too late and we welcome it,” ETPB spokesperson Amir Hashmi told PTI.

    He said some 3,000 Sikhs will arrive in Pakistan from India via Wagah Border on Wednesday and many others from other parts of the world.

    The main event will be held on November 18 at Gurdwara Janamasthan Nankana Sahib and all visiting yatrees would be taken to the Gurdwara Kartarpur Sahib as well.

    In November 2019, Pakistan Prime Minister Minister Imran Khan had formally inaugurated the Kartarpur Corridor as part of commemoration of the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak at a colourful ceremony, paving the way for Indian Sikh pilgrims to visit one of their religion’s holiest sites in Pakistan without needing a visa.

    The 4 km-long Kartarpur Corridor provides visa free access to Indian Sikh pilgrims to visit Gurdwara Darbar Sahib.

    Sikhism founder Guru Nanak Dev lived and died at this gurdwara at the start of the 16th century.

  • As Pakistan pumps drugs, experts warn of losing a generation to narcotics in Kashmir

    By PTI

    SRINAGAR: The narcotics menace, especially heroin, is scaling new heights in Kashmir with experts warning that a majority of the young people may fall prey to drug abuse and Jammu and Kashmir Police chief Dilbag Singh blaming Pakistan for targeting youngsters by making them habitual to drugs.

    Taking a holistic view of the strife-torn Kashmir valley, police as well as social workers and medical doctors are of the opinion that while the violence caused by three decades of terrorism has consumed a generation, the drug menace will negatively effect the present generation.

    Singh pins the blame on Pakistan, saying “they are repeating the same dirty game that they played in Punjab” — first giving arms training and later spoiling the youth with drugs.

    Asked about the observations made by experts that Kashmir has lost a generation to conflict and may lose the next to drug abuse, Singh replied, “Definitely, yes and I have no two opinions about it”.

    Talking to PTI, Singh said the drug menace has shown a considerable increase in the last two years and the narcotics are smuggled from Punjab and Jammu borders.

    “We had some good seizures too. We know that sale proceeds of the drugs are pumped into funding terrorism and, therefore, we have been extra vigilant about it and taking efforts to curb it,” he said.

    The main areas affected by the drug menace are Karnah in North Kashmir, Anantnag in South Kashmir and some areas of Jammu, the police chief said.

    Police have taken a leading role in setting up drug de-addiction centres in Srinagar and Jammu while some more are coming up in North Kashmir, he added.

    “I guess it is time for socio-religious leaders to step in on an urgent basis to wean away youth from the menace. Today, we have time and tomorrow we may not have it. So, it is better to act now and act fast,” the police chief said in his appeal.

    Echoing similar views, Dr Mohammed Muzzafar Khan, who heads the de-addiction centre of police in Srinagar, feels that the number of such centres in the valley is minuscule compared to the magnitude of people affected by narcotics.

    Khan said the situation on the ground is worse as more and more young boys are getting addicted to narcotics.

    “Earlier, we used to see boys aged 18 and above (addicted to drugs) but now there are cases of 12 and 13-year-olds and the nature of drug abuse has changed as well. Earlier, it was charas or medicinal opioids but now heroin is replacing them,” Khan told PTI.

    He said youths get addicted to heroin quickly and within days become dependent on injections to inject drugs intravenously and the menace is spread across Kashmir in its urban and rural areas and among the rich and poor population.

    Khan said the Youth Development and Rehabilitation Centre headed by him is a 50-bed hospital.

    “It is a minuscule facility compared to the number of people affected. I would go on to say that the facility is non-existent…Around 10 years ago, we required de-addiction centres, but today we require a medical emergency facility because sometimes, an addict requires a ventilator immediately due to the overdose of heroine,” he said.

    Pointing out to a survey by the National Drug Dependence Treatment Centre of the AIIMS, New Delhi on the “Magnitude of Substance Use in India” in which Jammu and Kashmir was placed at the fifth spot with over 6 lakh people affected by drug abuse, Khan said, “I would now say that this is again a conservative estimate.

    “People do not confess to use of narcotics because of social stigma. Seeing the number of patients coming in every month, which ranges anywhere between 10 and 15 per day, I think more people are affected by it,” he added.

    Mir Zubair Rashid, co-founder of Concerned About Universal Social Empowerment (CAUSE), an NGO working for providing medical assistance and rehabilitation to drug addicts, said, “We lost one generation in conflict and next we will lose to drug abuse”.

    Rashid and his team have been working round-the-clock to take drug addicts to government hospitals for treatment and following up to ensure there is no relapse and that they remain sober.

    “See, post treatment counselling is very important. We are trying to do our bit, but I guess the entire society has to wake up,” he said.

    Mantasha Binti Rashid, a 2011-batch Kashmir Administrative Services officer, says, “Having actively worked on the issue since my university days, I am aware how stigmatised it is to have a family member or a child indulge in abuse. People hide it, attach shame to it and as a result, the treatment suffers along with the health, confidence, self-respect, and quality of life of the abuser”.

    “To treat narcotics abuse, a robust support structure, accepting family environment and a positive societal set-up is required. And our place does not have much to offer to youth who are already engulfed by this disease. It may be a choice to begin with but as it progresses, it becomes a disease a disease at an individual level and at a collective level too, if left unchecked,” she said.

  • Pakistan urges India to reopen Kartarpur Corridor for pilgrims

    By PTI

    ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Tuesday urged India to reopen the Kartarpur Corridor from its side and allow Sikh pilgrims to visit the holy site for the upcoming Guru Nanak Dev’s birthday celebrations.

    The Kartarpur Corridor was inaugurated by Prime Minister Imran Khan on the eve of the 550th birth anniversary of Guru Nanak Dev on November 9, 2019, according to the Foreign Office.

    But the coronavirus pandemic hit the region along with the world just months after the opening of the corridor.

    The movement of pilgrims to Pakistan through the corridor has been suspended since March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the neighbouring country banned all travel from India citing the surge in cases in April this year.

    India “is yet to open the corridor from its side and allow pilgrims to visit Kartarpur Sahib,” said the FO.

    “We look forward to hosting devotees from India and around the world” for the upcoming Guru Nanak Dev’s Birthday celebrations from 17-26 November, it said.

    “Pakistan expects that India in the spirit of cooperation would allow pilgrims to travel through the corridor to visit Kartarpur Sahib,” it added.

    The 4km-long Kartarpur Corridor provides visa free access to Indian Sikh pilgrims to visit Gurdwara Darbar Sahib.

    Sikhism founder Guru Nanak Dev lived and died at this gurdwara at the start of the 16th century.

  • Maharashtra fisherman killed allegedly in firing by Pakistan maritime security personnel off Gujarat coast: Police

    By PTI

    DWARAKA: A fisherman from Maharashtra was killed and a crew member of his boat was injured allegedly in firing by Pakistan Maritime Security Agency (PMSA) personnel near international maritime boundary line in the Arabian sea off Gujarat coast, a police official said on Sunday.

    The incident occurred around 4 PM on Saturday, he said.

    “A fisherman from Thane in Maharashtra, who was on a fishing boat ‘Jalpari,’ was killed after the PMSA personnel opened fire on him and other crew members on Saturday evening,” Devbhumi Dwarka Superintendent of Police Sunil Joshi said.

    There were seven crew members on the boat and one of them also sustained a minor injury in the firing incident, he said.

    The body of fisherman Sridhar Ramesh Chamre (32) was brought to Okha port on Sunday and an FIR was being registered by the Porbandar Navi Bandar police, which has jurisdiction across Gujarat over any incident that occurs beyond 12 nautical miles in the Arabian sea, he added.

    “Chamre was on the fishing boat ‘Jalpari’, which had sailed from Okha on October 25 with seven crew members, five of whom were from Gujarat and two from Maharashtra,” Joshi said.

    Investigation into the incident was underway, he said.

    In a statement, the Indian Coast Guard (ICG) said: “The case is under investigation at present by police authorities and crew are being interviewed jointly. Details can be shared only after completion of the investigation.”

    However, the ICG confirmed that there was a firing in which one person died and one person was injured.

    When asked about Pakistan’s claim of arresting six “occupants” of the boat, the ICG responded: “Arrests not confirmed.”

  • Inflation in Pakistan will continue to rise for next six months: Report

    Inflation in Pakistan is on the rise and it has triggered countrywide protests by the Opposition and people.

  • Kashmiri students held over pro-Pakistan slogans booked for sedition, sent to 14-day judicial custody

    By PTI

    NOIDA: Three Kashmiri students arrested in Agra for allegedly raising pro-Pakistan slogans were on Thursday booked for sedition, Uttar Pradesh Police officials said.

    The three students, two of them aged 20 and one 21, were also remanded in 14-day judicial custody by an Agra court, the officials said. While coming out of the court, they were allegedly heckled and chased by some people.

    Meanwhile, a body of Jammu and Kashmir students urged Uttar Pradesh CM Yogi Adityanath for the withdrawal of the sedition charge against them.

    Adityanath earlier in the day had said the sedition law will be invoked against those celebrating Pakistan’s victory against India in the recent T20 World Cup match.

    “The three students were arrested on Wednesday after an FIR was lodged against them at the Jagdishpura police station.

    They were accused of raising pro-Pakistan slogans in the wake of an India-Pakistan T20 cricket match and posting celebratory messages on social media after Pakistan’s victory,” a police official said.

    On Thursday, they were produced in a magistrate’s court in Agra, which remanded them in 14-day judicial custody, the official said.

    “The FIR was initially registered under IPC Sections 153A (promoting enmity between groups) and 505 (creating or publishing content to promote enmity). Section 124A (sedition) of the IPC was included on Friday in the case,” the police official said. The trio studies in a private college affiliated to Agra University.

    When the students were coming out of the court, some right wing activists raised slogans against Pakistan and chased them.

    Some lawyers also heckled the students while they were being taken from the court to a police vehicle, according to purported videos that emerged on social media. However, the Agra police said they escorted the students to safety.

    “The students were taken to the court in a discreet manner and were similarly taken out from there considering the sensitivity of the matter. However, some people heckled the trio on the court premises but none was hurt. They were all safe,” the police official told PTI.

    Nasir Khuehami, national spokesperson of the Jammu and Kashmir Students’ Association, urged the Uttar Pradesh chief minister to drop sedition charges against the students, seeking “mercy on humanitarian grounds”.

    They have urged the chief minister to intervene for the withdrawal of the sedition case and the FIR against the students, he said in a statement.

    “The college authorities must revoke the suspension of the students, whom we urged to focus on their studies,” he said.

    Mansoor Wani, a research fellow at Agra University and mentor of the accused students, said they were young and needed counselling instead of such heckling.

    “We apologise on their behalf if they were involved in such an unfortunate incident. But these are young men from financially weak backgrounds. They need guidance. We will counsel them. They should not be booked under such harsh laws. It will ruin their careers,” Wani added.