At least 26 people were killed in the dangerous terrorist attack in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir, on Tuesday, according to former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who has expressed his profound grief and anger. The majority of the patients were vacationers.
Sunak wrote in response to X that” the barbaric attack in Pahalgam has taken the lives of brides, children, and families who are just looking for pleasure.” Our emotions ache for them. To those in pain, please understand that the UK is there to support you in all your pain and love. Terror did not triumph. We are grieving for India.
The Resistance Front ( TRF), a group connected to Lashkar-e-Taiba in Pakistan, claimed responsibility for the attack. Gunmen opened fire in a well-known holiday meadow near to Pahalgam city in what has turned out to be the worst attack in the area since the Pulwama bombing of 2019 last year.
Donald Trump, the chairman of the US, and other world leaders have criticized India and expressed their support for it. Trump described the attack as “deeply disconcerting” and said that the United States supported India’s efforts to combat terrorism.
A high-level safety gathering was presided over by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi after returning from a trip to Saudi Arabia. In reply, India has since ended its relationship with Pakistan under the Indus Waters Treaty.
Prior to the Pahalgam terror attack, which left 28 people dead, most of whom were tourists, Defense Minister Rajnath Singh gave an assurance to the country that the country would be “loud and evident” in its response. According to Ranjanth Singh, the government would detain both the perpetrators of the horrifying harm and those responsible for it.
Trending
- The View from the Bottom: How ABC’s Harpies Drowned Out the Last Shred of Civility
- Haiti slams ‘xenophobic’ deportation drive by Dominican Republic
- In her own (AI) voice: 5 things Melania Trump reveals in her memoir
- North Korea vows to arrest those responsible for failed ship launch
- Argentina’s Milei expands limits on right to strike
- Record floods devastate eastern Australia
- Judge blocks Trump administration from rescinding foreign students’ legal status
- Seoul says no talks with US on potential troop pullout