All commercial airlines avoid Pakistan airspace as alarming flight radar images shows chilling escalation
All commercial airlines are steering clear of Pakistan’s airspace following an unsettling flight radar image. chilling escalations.
SpiceJet mentions it has canceled flights heading to Srinagar. Indian-controlled Kashmir’s main city, And to the cities of Dharamshala, Leh, Jammu, and Amritsar in northern India following the closure of their airports "until further notice."
The Indian civil aviation ministry did not provide an instant response. Additionally, two other Indian carriers announced they would be halting their services to these airports until potentially later on Wednesday. This decision followed Missiles launched from India hit several areas throughout Pakistan. According to officials, at least four mosques and a medical clinic were damaged. A missile struck a mosque in Muridke, a town east of Lahore, compromising its structural integrity.
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A large structure situated close to the mosque in Muridkey formerly acted as the command center for Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) up until 2013. At this time, Pakistan outlawed the organization and assumed management over the educational institutions, religious seminaries, and health clinics operated by a trust associated with Hafiz Saeed, who was the founding figure of LeT.
In Bahawalpur, another missile struck a mosque adjacent to a religious seminary that once served as the central office of Jaish-e-Mohammed, a militant group outlawed by former President Pervez Musharraf in 2002.
Officials say the group has had no operational presence at the site since the ban.
Officials stated that authorities in Indian-administered Kashmir have shut down all schools, colleges, and educational facilities across at least seven border zones within the area. They added that schools near Srinagar airport would stay closed as well.
The Pakistan Ministry of Foreign Affairs states that they have notified the U.N. Security Council regarding the Indian assaults and the danger these pose to global peace and security.

The ministry says in a statement that the Security Council was told that “Pakistan reserves the right to respond appropriately to this aggression at a time and place of its choosing.”
Indian security officials say that army, navy and air force personnel used precision strike weapon systems, including drones, to carry out the strikes. The officials said that intelligence agencies provided coordinates for the strikes and that all operations were executed from Indian territory.
The officials said the strikes targeted the headquarters of militant groups Jaish-e-Mohammed in Bahawalpur and Lashkar-e-Taiba in Muridke.
The U.S. secretary of state says in a post on X that “I am monitoring the situation between India and Pakistan closely.”
Rubio continued: “I echo @POTUS’s comments earlier today that this hopefully ends quickly and will continue to engage both Indian and Pakistani leadership towards a peaceful resolution.”
Trump said earlier Tuesday that he hopes the fighting “ends very quickly” and called it “a shame.”
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