Pakistan says “increased vigilance” but no troop buildup on border with India

Flames and smoke billowing from a residential building during a gun battle between militants and Indian security forces in the Pulwama District of the Kashmir Valley on Monday 18 February 2019. (Associated Press)
Updated 20 February 2019
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Pakistan says “increased vigilance” but no troop buildup on border with India

  • Pakistan parliament adopts resolution against Indian threats of counter-attack after last week’s suicide bombing in disputed Kashmir
  • Prime Minister Khan has urged talks but warned India against taking military action

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani security and government officials said on Wednesday Pakistan had not deployed extra troops along its common border with India following last week’s suicide bombing on an Indian police convoy in the disputed Kashmir region, but warned that the military was on “high alert.”
Tensions between the two arch rivals have escalated sharply after a bomber slammed into an Indian police convoy in the disputed Kashmir Valley on February 14, killing at least 40 Indian paramilitary police.
Jaish-e Mohammad (JeM), a militant group said to be based in Pakistan, claimed responsibility for the attack. The Pakistani government has denied any involvement. The country has long held that it only provides diplomatic and moral backing to the Kashmiri people in their struggle for self-determination against Indian occupation.
Faced with a looming election, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is under pressure from hardliners to take decisive action in response to the attack and has said he has given the military a free hand. His counterpart Imran Khan said on Tuesday Pakistan would retaliate if attacked.
Since independence from the British in 1947, the neighbours have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir.
A security official denied reports that Pakistan was building up troops on the Line of Control, the de facto border dividing Indian- and Pakistani-administered Kashmir, widely considered one of the most dangerous flashpoints in the world.
“We stay alert all the time, but there is no extra troop buildup at this time,” the official said, declining to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the media on the record.
An official at the ministry of foreign affairs, requesting anonymity, said there was “increased vigilance” by the military on the border but no deployment of extra troops.
“India should not test us, but war is not in anyone’s interest,” he said. “We are keeping a close eye on the situation. We have offered again and again to India that we should talk.”
The army’s media wing and the foreign office did not respond to requests for official comment.
Pakistan's lower house of parliament on Wednesday adopted a resolution strongly rejecting Indian allegations linking Pakistan to the February 14 convoy attack and denounced reprisal attacks on Kashmiris in Indian-administered Kashmir as well as the targeting of Kashmiri students across India.
The parliamentary resolution said New Delhi's smear campaign against Pakistan would not "delude or obscure the real issues of human rights nightmare and humanitarian emergency prevalent in IoK [Indian occupied Kashmir] due to the Indian atrocities."
In a report released last year, the U.N. called for an international inquiry into excessive use of force in Kashmir by Indian security forces which it said had killed and maimed numerous civilians since 2016.

Tensions may yet rise after Indian media widely reported that a Pakistani inmate serving a life sentence in a terrorism case at Jaipur Central Jail was allegedly beaten to death by a group of inmates on Wednesday.
In September 2016, after 19 soldiers were killed in an attack on an Indian army base in Kashmir that India blamed on infiltrators from Pakistan, India said it had carried out “surgical strikes” inside Pakistan. India declined to provide more evidence of the operation. Pakistan “completely rejected” that the alleged raid by Indian special forces had taken place.
“If you can carry out any kind of attack on Pakistan, Pakistan will not just think about retaliating, Pakistan will retaliate,” the Pakistani prime minister said in a video message on Tuesday. “There will be no other way for Pakistan to respond than to retaliate.”
In 2001, Jaish mounted an attack on the Indian parliament that brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war. India’s repeated efforts to have Jaish chief Masood Azhar put on a U.N. Security Council blacklist have been blocked by China, a staunch political ally and economic partner to Pakistan.
“Unless Pakistan takes decisive action, once and for all, against these problematic groups, it will keep losing out in the court of global opinion,” political analyst Mohammad Malick said. “For now, what we have is a large sized pressure cooker with perfectly timed pressure valves; so rhetoric will go to a feverish pitch but both sides will stop short of an actual physical confrontation.”
“It’s election year in India. This is to be expected,” he said about India’s threats of a counter-attack.
In remarks to media on Wednesday after briefing top United Nations’ leaders about escalating tensions, Pakistan’s ambassador to the UN Maleeha Lodhi said she had reiterated Pakistan’s readiness to a “constructive and meaningful dialogue with India.” “I explained India’s no-talk posture is not only irresponsible, but it puts at stake the peace and security of all of South Asia,” she said.
Pakistan and India are currently also engaged in hearings at the U.N. court, formally known as the International Court of Justice, in a dispute over a former Indian navy officer arrested in Pakistan in March 2016 and sentenced to death for allegedly spying for India. A ruling in the case is not expected for several months after the close of hearings on Thursday.


Pakistan to play India in T20 World Cup, government says

Updated 09 February 2026
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Pakistan to play India in T20 World Cup, government says

  • Islamabad announced boycotting the Feb. 15 match in Colombo to protest the ICC’s exclusion of Bangladesh from the T20 World Cup
  • Pakistan’s government says the decision to play India is taken to protect ‘spirit of cricket and to support the continuity of global sport’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has cleared the country’s cricket team to play India in the T20 World Cup on Feb. 15, the Pakistani government announced late Monday, ending a week-long standoff.

Islamabad announced boycotting the Feb. 15 match in Colombo to protest the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) exclusion of Bangladesh from the T20 World Cup, following Dhaka’s decision to not play matches in India owing to security fears.

On Sunday, ICC Deputy Chairman Imran Khwaja arrived in Lahore for talks with Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) officials and Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) President Aminul Islam as the sport’s governing body strived to save the high-stakes T20 World Cup encounter.

PCB Chairman Mohsin Naqvi met PM Sharif late Monday and briefed him regarding the outcomes of high-level deliberations held between the PCB, Bangladesh board and ICC representatives, the Pakistani government said on X.

“The Government of Pakistan has reviewed the formal requests extended to the PCB by the Bangladesh Cricket Board, as well as the supporting communications from Sri Lanka, the United Arab Emirates, and other member nations. These correspondences sought Pakistan’s leadership in securing a viable solution to recent challenges,” the Pakistani government said.

“In view of the outcomes achieved in multilateral discussions, as well as the request of friendly countries, the Government of Pakistan hereby directs the Pakistan National Cricket Team to take the field on February 15, 2026, for its scheduled fixture in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.”

The BCB earlier thanked the PCB, ICC and all others for their positive roles in trying to “overcome recent challenges,” particularly thanking PCB Chairman Naqvi and Pakistani cricket fans for demonstrating “exemplary sportsmanship and solidarity.”

“We are deeply moved by Pakistan’s efforts to go above and beyond in supporting Bangladesh during this period. Long may our brotherhood flourish,” BCB President Islam said in a statement.

“Following my short visit to Pakistan yesterday and given the forthcoming outcomes of our discussions, I request Pakistan to play the ICC T20 World Cup game on 15 February against India for the benefit of the entire cricket ecosystem.”

The dispute stemmed from the ICC’s decision to replace Bangladesh with Scotland last month after Bangladesh refused to play tournament matches in India. Dhaka’s decision followed the removal of Mustafizur Rahman from the Indian Premier League (IPL). He was bought for $1 million by the IPL’s Kolkata Knight Riders, but on Jan. 3 the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) ordered Kolkata to release Mustafizur without a public explanation but amid regional tensions.

Pakistani cricket authorities subsequently announced boycotting the match against India at R. Premadasa Stadium in Colombo on Feb. 15. An India-Pakistan fixture is the sport’s most lucrative asset, generating a massive share of global broadcasting and sponsorship revenue.

“This decision [to play India in T20 World Cup] has been taken with the aim of protecting the spirit of cricket, and to support the continuity of this global sport in all participating nations,” the Pakistani government said.

“We remain confident that our team will carry the spirit of sportsmanship and national pride onto the field as they compete for global glory.”