The Indian Prime Minister Narendra amended Thursday to track down unidentified attackers who killed 26 people in cashmere controlled by India two days earlier.
“I say to the whole world: India will identify, follow and punish all the terrorists and their donors. We will pursue them to the ends of the earth,” he said in a speech in the state of the Bihar.
“The spirit of India will never be broken by terrorism. Terrorism will not remain unpunished. All efforts will be made to guarantee that justice will be made. The whole nation is firm in this determination. All those who believe in humanity are with us.”
Modi also called for a multipartite meeting with the opposition parties to inform them of the government's response.
An little -known militant group called the resistance front claimed the responsibility of the attack in the Himalayan tourist town of Pahalgam. In a telegram message detailing his motivations, he exhilarating the “foreigners” who, according to him, “tried to settle illegally” in the region.
However, Modi's government and security forces also pointed out on Pakistan, insisting that the resistance front is a front for the armed Islamist group based in Pakistan longtime Lashkar-E-Taiba.
On Wednesday evening, New Delhi accused Islamabad of supporting “cross -border terrorism” and began to demode diplomatic links, to suspend a keywater sharing treaty and to close the main border crossing of the two countries.
There are fears that India can go beyond diplomatic sanctions as media and leaders of the Party of the Hindu nationalist power of Modi calls for military action.
Pakistan denied the allegation of complicity in the attack and declared that it would respond Thursday to the actions of India and would convene its national security committee, which is made up of senior civil and military civil servants.
“India has taken irresponsible measures and leveled allegations,” said Pakistan Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ishaq Dar, the local television channel Dunya News, adding that “any kinetic stage of India will see a kinetic response from Tit-to-Tat” of Pakistan.
India tightened its cashmere control in 2019 in response to continuous rebellions against its power there, and violence has since decreased somewhat after decades of reverse conflict.
New Delhi hoped that the rise of a tourism industry and improved infrastructure would help strengthen its catch in the region, and the murder of a large number of tourists in an unexpected attack could be a major blow.