India, Pakistan
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By Asif Shahzad, Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam and Shivam PatelISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Pakistan said on Tuesday that it remains committed to the truce with India, agreed after four days of intense fighting last week,
Mohammad Iqbal was working the nightshift at a power plant when he got a frantic call from his family saying artillery shells were exploding around their home.
A Pakistani reporter faced a humiliating moment when the United States shut him down for accusing Prime Minister Narendra Modi of opposing the de-escalation talks between Delhi and Islamabad.
Pakistan has declared an Indian high commission staff member 'persona non grata' following India's expulsion of a Pakistani staffer linked to espionage.
India and Pakistan engaged in the most intense fighting in decades with four days of escalating conflict that included fighter jets, missiles and drones packed with explosives. It ended almost as abruptly as it began.
Pakistan will have to get rid of its "terrorist infrastructure" if it wants to be "saved", Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Monday, his first comments on the military clashes with Pakistan since last week's deadly fighting between the two countries.
1don MSN
Shilpak Ambule, India's high commissioner to Singapore said that "everybody is on operational alert. But that does not mean that our India growth story and focus on economy gets affected." His comments come against the backdrop of tensions between India and Pakistan,
India says its strikes into Pakistan-controlled Kashmir and Pakistan on Wednesday killed more than 100 militants.