India brands Pakistan ‘home of terrorism’ & says ‘remember where bin Laden was found’ as nations on brink of war

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INDIA has branded Pakistan the “epicentre of global terrorism” as tensions between the two nuclear armed powers continue to spiral.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri made the scathing remark in a briefing today, adding: “I don’t need to remind the audience where bin Laden was found.”

EPAPakistani Army soldiers pass by the compound where Osama Bin Laden, the leader of terrorist network Al-Qaeda was killed by US military forces[/caption]

APPeople holding Indian national flags rally’s in support of the Indian Army as they celebrate the success of ‘Operation Sindoor’[/caption]

EPATeachers of Karachi University hold national flags and shout anti-India slogans during a protest against India in Karachi[/caption]

It comes as a military standoff between the neighbouring powers continues to draw international attention, with fears of nuclear escalation on the minds of many diplomats.

Pakistan claimed today it has killed 40 to 50 Indian soldiers along the de factor border between the two sides’ territory in the disputed region of Kashmir.

India yesterday launched a barrage of missile strikes on nine targets in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

The escalation follows a horrifying attack in Kashmir last month, when 26 people were killed by gunmen.

India has blamed Pakistan for the massacre, but Islamabad denies any involvement.

New Delhi has long accused Pakistan of supporting terrorist groups operating in Indian-administered Kashmir – with some even calling the country a “save haven” for terrorists.

The death of Osama bin Laden

Osama bin Laden was hunted by the United States for years after the devastating attacks of 9/11

The Al-Qaeda leader was one of the most notorious wanted people in the world for much of the 2000s as the War on Terror dominated geopolitics.

The Americans had searched for him during the War in Afghanistan, but he was not found in the country.

He was eventually located in Pakistan, where the United States carried out a raid in 2011 – in which the Al-Qaeda was killed.

The raid took around 40 minutes in the early hours of the morning.

Bin Laden and four other people were killed.

Misri continued his blistering critique, saying: “Pakistan is also home to a large number of UN proscribed terrorists and also to terrorists proscribed by many countries.”

“Pakistan’s reputation as the epicentre of global terrorism is rooted in a number of instances,” he added.

Osama bin Laden was notoriously found in Pakistan after a years long hunt for the terrorist leader – where he was killed by US forces in May 2011.

Both sides accuse each other of firing drones and missiles into one another’s territory since the Kashmir attack.

But Pakistani Inter-Services Public Relations Director General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry told local outlet ARY News: “When Pakistan strikes, the Indian media won’t need to spin stories — the whole world will know.”

Pakistan has accused India of deliberately targeting civilians in their strikes, but New Delhi insists it has only hit sites used by militants.

The ongoing fighting has sparked fears around the world that India and Pakistan could be on a path to all out war.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif held a televised address to the nation yesterday amid claims that around 30 civilians were killed in India’s strikes.

He said:  “I promise that we will take revenge for every drop of blood of these victims.”

Islamabad claims it has taken down several Indian drones and five fighter jets.

Meanwhile, India reports that 16 people, including three women and five children, have died since Wednesday morning in Pakistani shelling.

Shutterstock EditorialAn elderly man sits inside a damaged house after shelling from the Pakistan side following the Indian Army’s ‘Operation Sindoor’[/caption]

Diplomats and world leaders are urging the two nations to step back from the brink of all out war, with fears a nuclear exchange could kill up to 125 million people.

While the two nations only have relatively small nuclear arsenals compared to countries like Russia and the United States, many observers are deeply concerned about the devastating impact they could still cause.

Colonel Philip Ingram, a former British Army commander, told The Sun:

“Western intelligence in particular will be focused on the readiness and the outloading of nuclear stocks inside both Pakistan and India and monitoring what’s happening to them very closely indeed.

“The worrying thing about these two nations is that the tensions are very real.”

The region of Kashmir has been bitterly disputed by India and Pakistan for decades.

Both countries partially control the Muslim-majority region, and tensions have spilled over into war several times before.

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