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27 Feb 19: PAF shot down two Indian aircrafts inside Pakistani airspace: DG ISPR

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Probably Pakistan baited them..
You go in disperse ..with second team ready to kill

probably paf launched attacks on IOK and IAF tried to intercept them resulting in them getting shot down

Whatever the case may be, the capture of an iaf pilot , if true , will be a huge setback for the Indian govt.
 
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[SIZE=6 said:
"PAF shot down two Indian aircrafts inside Pakistani airspace," he said in a tweet.

One of the aircraft fell on India-held Kashmir, while the second came down in Pakistani-held territory, and its pilot was captured, he added.[/SIZE]


Maj Gen Asif Ghafoor

✔@OfficialDGISPR



View image on Twitter


Ansar Abbasi

✔@AnsarAAbbasi


Gift for India from Pakistan!!! Pakistan
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Zindabad


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5:29 PM - Feb 27, 2019

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Both China and the European Union have also called for restraint. On Wednesday New Zealand's Deputing Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Winston Peters also voiced concern over the escalation in tensions.

Reuters


Above pic is fake. it is of hawk trainer crashed in 2018 in Orrisa. Anyone can check. Fake Pakistani propaganda. O
 
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Now an image of Hawk jet trainer crash from 2015 being passed off as shot down by PAF :rofl::rofl:

https://odishasuntimes.com/iaf-fighter-plane-crashes-in-odishas-mayurbhanj/

Tail number - A3492

MBJ-CRASH.jpg
Pakistan shoots down two Indian warplanes and captures pilot
By Sunita Patel-Carstairs, news reporter

Pakistan says it has shot down two Indian warplanes over Kashmir and captured one of the pilots.

An army spokesman said the country's air force shot down the jets after they crossed the boundary between the two nuclear rivals in the disputed territory.

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Major General Asif Ghafoor said one plane went down in Indian-controlled Kashmir and another crashed on its own territory where Pakistani troops on the ground arrested the pilot.

It comes a day after Pakistan threatened India with retaliation after its rival launched an airstrike against militants in the Pakistan-controlled part of Kashmir.

Maj Gen Ghafoor warned New Delhi in a news conference on Tuesday: "It is your turn now to wait and get ready for our surprise."

India said its strike inside Pakistan was to prevent the Jaish-e-Mohammad group from launching an attack.


The Pakistan-based militant group claimed it had carried out a suicide bombing on a convoy of India's paramilitary forces in Indian-controlled Kashmir on 14 February, killing 40 troops.

https://news.sky.com/story/pakistan-shoots-down-two-indian-warplanes-and-captures-pilot-11649515

Thats a Hawk trainer crash in eastern india in 2018.

Please post only confirmed news.
The news is confirmed, there are multiple channels reporting it.
 
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Pakistan shoots down two Indian fighter jets after dropping bombs across de facto border: Sources

https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/s...er-jets-intercept-pakistani-planes-in-kashmir

SRINAGAR/NEW DELHI (REUTERS, AFP, BLOOMBERG) - Pakistan shot down two Indian Air Force planes in its airspace in Kashmir on Wednesday (Feb 27), a military spokesman said, adding that one Indian pilot had been captured.

“PAF shot down two Indian aircrafts inside Pakistani airspace,” tweeted military spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor, adding that one aircraft had fallen in Pakistani-held Kashmir, while the other crashed on the Indian side.

“One Indian pilot arrested by troops on ground while two in the area,” he said without elaborating further.

News agency ANI reported that India also shot down a Pakistan air force F-16 fighter jet. The fighter jet was shot down in Indian retaliatory fire 3km within Pakistan territory in Lam valley, Nowshera sector.

Islamabad said it had struck across the Line of Control, the de facto border between India and Pakistan, from “within Pakistani airspace”.

“This was not a retaliation to continued Indian belligerence. Pakistan has therefore, taken strikes at non-military target, avoiding human loss and collateral damage. Sole purpose being to demonstrate our right, will and capability for self-defence,” Islamabad said in a statement.




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“This is unprecedented territory, we haven’t had tit-for-tat air strikes between India and Pakistan since the 1971 war,” said Mr Anit Mukherjee, a former Indian Army major and assistant professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, by phone.

“We don’t know what will come from this. But it seems like Pakistan has given a response. And there have been casualties – captures, deaths.”

“We have had this sort of thing happening on the ground for the last 20 years,” Mr Mukherjee added. “It’s basically a shifting of the conflict to the air.”

CNN-IBN reported that commercial air traffic had been shut down in Chandigarh, Leh and the whole of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, with some flights to Jammu and Srinagar returning to their cities of origin.

India and Pakistan exchanged fire along their contested border in Kashmir on Wednesday (Feb 27), a day after Indian warplanes struck inside Pakistan for the first time since a war in 1971, while leading powers urged the nuclear armed rivals to show restraint.

Tensions have been elevated since a suicide car bombing by Pakistan-based militants in Indian-controlled Kashmir killed at least 40 Indian paramilitary police on Feb 14, but the risk of conflict rose dramatically on Tuesday when India launched an air strike on what it said was a militant training base.

The attack targeted the Jaish-e-Mohammed militant group, which claimed credit for the suicide attack.

But while India said a large number of JeM fighters had been killed, Pakistani officials said the Indian air strike was a failure and inflicted no casualties.

On Tuesday evening, Pakistan began shelling using heavy calibre weapons in 12 to 15 places along the de facto border in Kashmir, known as the Line of Control (LoC), a spokesman for the Indian defence forces said on Wednesday.

Indian fighter jets strike Pakistan terror camp, Islamabad vows response[/paste:font]
After India's strike on Pakistan, both sides leave room for de-escalation[/paste:font]
Decades of animosity between neighbours India and Pakistan[/paste:font]
"The Indian Army retaliated for effect and our focused fire resulted in severe destruction to five posts and number of casualties," the spokesman said.

Five Indian soldiers suffered minor wounds in the shelling that ended on Wednesday morning, he added.

"So far there are no (civilian) casualties, but there is panic among people," said Poonch district deputy commissioner Rahul Yadav said.

"We have an evacuation plan in place and if need arises we will evacuate people to safer areas," he said.

Local officials on the Pakistani side said at least four people had been killed and seven wounded, though it was unclear if the casualties were civilian or military.

India has also continued its crackdown on suspected militants operating in Kashmir, a mountainous region that both countries claim in full but rule in part.

On Wednesday, security forces killed two Jaish militants in a gun battle, Indian police said.

HEIGHTENED SECURITY
Pakistan had promised to retaliate over Tuesday's air strikes, and security across India has been tightened.

The two countries have fought three wars since independence from British colonial rule in 1947 and went to the brink of a fourth war in 2002 after a Pakistani militant attack on India's Parliament.

In Punjab, an Indian state that borders Pakistan, security alerts are in place in several districts, according to media reports.

Top US diplomat Pompeo urges India and Pakistan to ‘exercise restraint’[/paste:font]
China urges India, Pakistan to 'exercise restraint' after air strike[/paste:font]
Kashmiris hoard food, fuel in panic amid India-Pakistan row[/paste:font]
Schools within 5 kilometres of LoC were closed in one district in Kashmir.

In Mumbai, India's financial capital, there was a visible increase in security levels in a city that has suffered numerous militant attacks in the past.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo spoke separately with the foreign ministers of India and Pakistan and urged them to avoid "further military activity" following Tuesday's air strike.

"I expressed to both ministers that we encourage India and Pakistan to exercise restraint, and avoid escalation at any cost," Mr Pompeo said in a statement on Wednesday.

"I also encouraged both ministers to prioritise direct communication and avoid further military activity," he said.

Both China and the European Union have also called for restraint.

On Wednesday, New Zealand's Foreign Minister Winston Peters also voiced concern over the escalation in tensions.

Pakistan has sought help from the United Nations to de-escalate the situation, while India – which is facing national elections in a few weeks – reached out to countries including the US, UK, China, France and Russia and urged the government in Islamabad to take action against terror groups based in the country.

India, Russia and China issued a joint communique on Wednesday after a meeting of their foreign ministers in which they said that extremist groups cannot be supported and used in political and geopolitical goals, and those backing terrorist acts must be held accountable and brought to justice.
 
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