logo
India-Pakistan live: Pakistan says it has killed dozens of Indian soldiers; India responds with 'misinformation' accusation

India-Pakistan live: Pakistan says it has killed dozens of Indian soldiers; India responds with 'misinformation' accusation

Sky News08-05-2025

Pakistan says it has killed dozens of Indian soldiers in Kashmir, as it responds to Indian airstrikes. India targeted what it called "terrorist infrastructure" yesterday after an attack in its area of Kashmir last month. Listen to The World podcast below as you scroll.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

45 minutes to pack up a lifetime as Pakistan's foreigner crackdown sends Afghans scrambling
45 minutes to pack up a lifetime as Pakistan's foreigner crackdown sends Afghans scrambling

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

45 minutes to pack up a lifetime as Pakistan's foreigner crackdown sends Afghans scrambling

The order was clear and indisputable, the timeline startling. You have 45 minutes to pack up and leave Pakistan forever. Sher Khan, a 42-year-old Afghan, had returned home from his job in a brick factory. He stared at the plainclothes policeman on the doorstep, his mind reeling. How could he pack up his whole life and leave the country of his birth in under an hour? In the blink of an eye, the life he had built was taken away from him. He and his wife grabbed a few kitchen items and whatever clothes they could for themselves and their nine children. They left everything else behind at their home in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir. Born in Pakistan to parents who fled the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the ensuing war, Khan is one of hundreds of thousands of Afghans who have now been expelled. The nationwide crackdown, launched in October 2023, on foreigners Pakistan says are living in the country illegally has led to the departures of almost 1 million Afghans already. Pakistan says millions more remain. It wants them gone. Leaving with nothing to beat a deadline 'All our belongings were left behind,' Khan said as he stood in a dusty, windswept refugee camp just across the Afghan border in Torkham, the first stop for expelled refugees. 'We tried so hard (over the years) to collect the things that we had with honor.' Pakistan set several deadlines earlier this year for Afghans to leave or face deportation. Afghan Citizen Card holders had to leave the capital Islamabad and Rawalpindi city by March 31, while those with Proof of Registration could stay until June 30. No specific deadlines were set for Afghans living elsewhere in Pakistan. Khan feared that delaying his departure beyond the deadline might have resulted in his wife and children being hauled off to a police station along with him a blow to his family's dignity. 'We are happy that we came (to Afghanistan) with modesty and honor,' he said. As for his lost belongings, 'God may provide for them here, as He did there.' A refugee influx in a struggling country At the Torkham camp, run by Afghanistan's Taliban government, each family receives a SIM card and 10,000 Afghanis ($145) in aid. They can spend up to three days there before having to move on. The camp's director, Molvi Hashim Maiwandwal, said some 150 families were arriving daily from Pakistan — far fewer than the roughly 1,200 families who were arriving about two months ago. But he said another surge was expected after the three-day Islamic holiday of Eid Al-Adha that started June 7. Aid organizations inside the camp help with basic needs, including healthcare. Local charity Aseel provides hygiene kits and helps with food. It has also set up a food package delivery system for families once they arrive at their final destination elsewhere in Afghanistan. Aseel's Najibullah Ghiasi said they expected a surge in arrivals 'by a significant number' after Eid. 'We cannot handle all of them, because the number is so huge,' he said, adding the organization was trying to boost fundraising so it could support more people. Pakistan blames Afghanistan for militancy Pakistan accuses Afghans of staging militant attacks inside the country, saying assaults are planned from across the border — a charge Kabul's Taliban government denies. Pakistan denies targeting Afghans, and maintains that everyone leaving the country is treated humanely and with dignity. But for many, there is little that is humane about being forced to pack up and leave in minutes or hours. Iran, too, has been expelling Afghans, with the UNHCR, the UN's refugee agency, saying on June 5 that 500,000 Afghans had been forced to leave Iran and Pakistan in the two months since April 1. Rights groups and aid agencies say authorities are pressuring Afghans into going sooner. In April, Human Rights Watch said police had raided houses, beaten and arbitrarily detained people, and confiscated refugee documents, including residence permits. Officers demanded bribes to allow Afghans to remain in Pakistan, the group added. Searching for hope while starting again Fifty-year-old Yar Mohammad lived in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir for nearly 45 years. The father of 12 built a successful business polishing floors, hiring several workers. Plainclothes policemen knocked on his door too. They gave him six hours to leave. 'No way a person can wrap up so much business in six hours, especially if they spent 45 years in one place,' he said. Friends rushed to his aid to help pack up anything they could: the company's floor-polishing machines, some tables, bed-frames and mattresses, and clothes. Now all his household belongings are crammed into orange tents in the Torkham refugee camp, his hard-earned floor-polishing machines outside and exposed to the elements. After three days of searching, he managed to find a place to rent in Kabul. 'I have no idea what we will do,' he said, adding that he would try to recreate his floor-polishing business in Afghanistan. 'If this works here, it is the best thing to do.'

Australian man allegedly abandons wife and baby overseas after tricking them into going on holiday to Pakistan
Australian man allegedly abandons wife and baby overseas after tricking them into going on holiday to Pakistan

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australian man allegedly abandons wife and baby overseas after tricking them into going on holiday to Pakistan

An Australian man who allegedly abandoned his wife and baby in Pakistan after convincing them to go on a holiday has been charged with human trafficking. The 45-year-old became the focus of a federal investigation in February after his wife filed a report alleging she had been left overseas without any documentation. The Australian Federal Police (AFP) will allege the man convinced his wife and one-year-old child to travel with him to Pakistan in August last year. When they arrived, he allegedly unlawfully took the child's passport and abandoned the pair at the airport before returning to Australia on his own. He then allegedly cancelled his wife's Australian visa and kept their child's passport. When his wife arrived back in Australia in February she contacted the AFP, who, along with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, flew the child home. The man was arrested at a home in Austral, in Sydney's southwest, on Wednesday and charged with human trafficking offences. He's facing charges of trafficking a person from Australia by using deception, which carries a maximum penalty of 12 years in prison. The man is led away by detectives after being charged with human trafficking The man was set to face the Liverpool Local Court on Thursday. In September, another man was hit with similar charges. He was accused of convincing his wife and children to fly to Pakistan with him after being told they would be visiting family members. He too left them and returned to Australia with their passports and visas.

The Documentary Podcast  The tyre scandal
The Documentary Podcast  The tyre scandal

BBC News

time6 hours ago

  • BBC News

The Documentary Podcast The tyre scandal

Every year the UK produces around 50 million tyres for disposal. They are supposed to be sent for recycling. Instead, big money is being made by diverting tyres to illegal and dangerous 'pyrolysis' plants where they are melted down to extract oil and steel. Together with a team of journalists from Source Material, a not-for-profit group specialising in climate and corruption, we follow the tyres from the UK to India using tracking devices. The team discovers just how large scale this largely illicit business has become. Earlier this year, a makeshift pyrolysis plant exploded near Mumbai, killing four people. It had been processing tyres from abroad. Reporter Paul Kenyon confronts a tyre trader in the north of England who admits to shipping his waste tyres to India for pyrolysis.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store