India-Pakistan conflict hits shared love of film, music

A Pakistani vendor poses for a photograph with pirated copies of Indian Bollywood film 'Raees' at his shop in Karachi on February 8, 2017. (AFP/File)
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Updated 30 June 2025
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India-Pakistan conflict hits shared love of film, music

  • India and Pakistan banned artists, YouTube channels from each other’s countries after their militaries fought in May 
  • While Bollywood movies have always been popular in Pakistan, Indians love music, drama serials produced by Pakistan

LAHORE: While conflict raged between the powerful militaries of India and Pakistan, a battle was also fought on the cultural front lines despite years of shared love for films and music.

The deadly fighting in early May — the worst in decades — affected artists previously untouched by animosity between their leaders.

Ali Gul Pir, a Pakistani rapper and comedian with a huge Indian following, released a song years ago mocking Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

While he was spared consequences then, in May, his YouTube channel and Instagram profile were blocked in India.

“Indians now recognize that the digital space serves as a bridge between Pakistanis and Indians, and they seem intent on severing that connection,” Pir told AFP.




In this photograph taken on June 17, 2025, a man looks at a film poster, Love Guru, featuring Pakistani actress Mahira Khan, outside a cineplex in Lahore. (AFP)

The collapse in bilateral relations was caused by a deadly April attack on tourists in India-administered Kashmir, which New Delhi blamed on Islamabad.

Pakistan denied the allegation and, after tit-for-tat diplomatic retaliation, their militaries fought for four days before a ceasefire was reached.

The conflict hit the music industry for the first time, with Pakistani singer Annural Khalid also remembering how her Indian following dropped off.

“Delhi was my top listening city before the ban,” said Khalid, who has 3.1 million monthly listeners on Spotify.

“I suffered a great loss in the audience” from India, she told AFP.

“Listeners were deprived of content because music was turned into something it is not,” Khalid added.




In this photograph taken on May 29, 2025, Pakistan's pop singer Annural Khalid sings inside her studio in Lahore. While conflict raged between the powerful militaries of India and Pakistan, a battle was also fought on the cultural front lines despite years of shared love for films and music. (AFP)

The conflict also scrubbed out some prior exchanges, such as the soundtrack of the 2017 film “Raees” on Spotify in India.

It now shows only Indian actor Shah Rukh Khan, without his Pakistani co-star Mahira Khan.

With Pakistan producing just a handful of movies each year under strict censorship rules, Bollywood has always proven popular among viewers.

“I grew up watching Bollywood. We have the same traumas, we have the same history, we have the same stories,” said Pakistani film critic Sajeer Shaikh.




In this photograph taken on May 23, 2025, Sajeer Shaikh, a Pakistani film critic and content creator, speaks with AFP during an interview in Karachi. (AFP)

Pakistani actors and directors have for decades seen making it to Bollywood as the ultimate recognition.




Indian Bollywood film actresses Sonam Kapoor (C) and Kirron Kher (L), and Pakistani actor Fawad Afzal Khan (2L) watch the daily retreat ceremony performed by Pakistani Rangers and Indian Border Security Force (BSF) personnel at India-Pakistan Border Wagah Post on September 17, 2014. (AFP/File)

But this month, Indian star Diljit Dosanjh announced his latest movie, “Sardaar Ji 3,” which features four Pakistani actors, would be released “overseas only,” after New Delhi banned Pakistani content and artists from productions.

“Abir Gulaal,” a love story starring Pakistan’s Fawad Khan and Indian actor Vaani Kapoor, was scheduled to hit Indian cinemas on May 9 but the release was postponed.

Even some in the industry who had previously backed the cross-border artistic trade changed their tune last month.

“Everything should be banned... cricket, films, everything,” said Indian actor Suniel Shetty, who has a big fan following in Pakistan.




In this photograph taken on June 17, 2025, a young boy walks past a film poster, Love Guru, featuring Pakistani actress Mahira Khan, inside a cineplex in Lahore. (AFP)

He starred in the 2004 movie “Main Hoon Na,” which subtly promotes peace between India and Pakistan.

“It’s something really unfortunate about politics, creating that rift and putting boundaries around art,” said Dua Zahra, assistant manager at Warner Bros South Asia’s music label in Pakistan.

As part of its measures in the wake of the Kashmir attack, New Delhi’s ban on some Pakistani YouTube channels included private broadcaster HUM TV.

The channel, which says around 40 percent of its viewers are from India, simply told its fans to use a VPN to continue watching.

Since Modi took office more than a decade ago, many Indian critics and filmmakers have warned that Bollywood is now increasingly promoting his government’s Hindu nationalist ideology.

While the conflict has created divisions on the cultural scene, there are signs that the trade will endure.

Over a month after the ceasefire, three Indian films were in the top 10 on Netflix Pakistan, while the top 20 trending songs in India included two Pakistani tracks.
Pir, the rapper and comedian, vowed to “bridge gaps.”

“Let’s not make war, let’s just make art,” he said.

“Let’s just not bomb each other.”


Pakistan says Afghan national behind Bajaur suicide bombing that killed 11 security personnel

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Pakistan says Afghan national behind Bajaur suicide bombing that killed 11 security personnel

  • Pakistan’s foreign ministry delivered ‘strong demarche’ this week to Kabul over the attack
  • Security official links multiple attacks in Pakistan to militants operating from Afghan soil

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has identified the suicide bomber behind a deadly attack in the northwestern district of Bajaur earlier this week as an Afghan national, a security official said amid accusations against the Taliban administration in Kabul of facilitating cross-border militancy.

The Feb. 16 suicide bombing at the Malangi post in Bajaur killed two civilians and 11 security personnel, prompting Pakistan’s foreign office to summon the Afghan deputy head of mission in Islamabad on Wednesday and deliver a “strong demarche” to Kabul over the attack.

“The suicide bomber was identified as Khariji Ahmad alias Qari Abdullah Abuzar, who was a resident of Balkh province, Afghanistan,” the official who spoke on condition of anonymity said, adding the attacker was also “part of the Taliban’s special forces.”

“The involvement of Afghan citizens in terrorism in Pakistan is clear evidence of the Taliban regime’s complete patronage and facilitation of terrorists,” he added.

Pakistan, which refers to militants as “Khwarij,” has repeatedly accused Afghanistan of sheltering proscribed armed groups such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), and of allowing them to launch attacks against Pakistani civilians and security forces. Kabul denies providing safe havens to militants targeting Pakistan.

The official said investigations had established links between the attacker and networks operating from Afghan territory.

According to the security official, several recent attacks in Pakistan had also been traced to Afghanistan, including a suicide bombing in Islamabad on Feb. 6 and assaults last year on a Judicial Complex in Islamabad and the Frontier Corps headquarters in Peshawar.

Authorities have previously said Afghan nationals were involved in attacks on the Dera Ismail Khan Police Training Center and the Wana Cadet College.

The official also cited the March 4, 2025 attack on Bannu Cantonment and the March 11, 2025 Jafar Express attack, saying their planners or facilitators had operated from across the border.
In another case, a suicide bomber arrested in September 2024 had confessed to receiving training in Afghanistan, he added.

Tensions between the two countries have flared repeatedly over security concerns. Last year, Pakistan shut several major border crossings with Afghanistan in October following one of the deadliest military escalations between the neighbors in recent years, which claimed dozens of lives on both sides.

Pakistan’s foreign office has said border crossings will remain closed until Kabul provides credible written assurances that it will prevent cross-border militant attacks and act against groups such as the Pakistani Taliban that Islamabad says operate from safe havens in Afghanistan.

Afghanistan’s Taliban-led government has consistently rejected Pakistan’s accusations, saying it does not allow its territory to be used against other countries.