‘Pak DGMO Picked The Phone And…’: J&K CM Omar Abdullah Mocks Pakistan After Ceasefire With India
- India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire on May 9, 2025, following renewed clashes along the Jammu and Kashmir border.
- The ceasefire followed Pakistan launching drone and artillery attacks after Operation Sindoor, prompting intense military responses from India.
- The Indian government issued a nationwide advisory urging citizens to avoid sharing unverified information and blocked Pakistani streaming content for security reasons.
- At least one senior official, Additional Deputy Commissioner Raj Kumar Thapa, died from shelling injuries, while 32 airports closed for civilian flights amid heightened security.
- The ceasefire’s implementation aims to halt hostilities immediately, and officials emphasized relief for affected civilians with ongoing talks planned to review the truce.
37 Articles
37 Articles
‘Pak DGMO Picked The Phone And…’: J&K CM Omar Abdullah Mocks Pakistan After Ceasefire With India
Jammu and Kashmir CM Omar Abdullah welcomed the ceasefire between India and Pakistan. Omar said, "Pakistan's DGMO called our DGMO and the ceasefire was implemented." He also said that "If it had happened 2-3 days ago, the lives we lost would not have been lost."
J-K CM Omar Abdullah welcomes ceasefire between India & Pakistan
Srinagar: Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah on Saturday welcomed the ceasefire between India and Pakistan saying it was better late than never. “I welcome from the depths of my heart the announcement made by Government of India spokesperson about restoration of ceasefire between India and Pakistan,” Abdullah told reporters at his residence. “Better late than never but had this ceasefire come two or three days earlier, perhaps the bl…
"Time To Provide Relief": Omar Abdullah Welcomes India-Pakistan Ceasefire
Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah welcomed the"full and immediate" ceasefire between India and Pakistan, which has come after two days of cross-border attacks and resultant damage to life and infrastructure.
Pakistan and India agree to ceasefire
After several days of airstrikes and violence, nuclear-armed countries India and Pakistan have now reached an agreement on a ceasefire. However, the long-running conflict is not over with today's announcement, says Professor Isak Svensson.
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