Tag Archives: India

India and Pakistan trade blame as delegates make diplomatic visit to U.S.



India and Pakistan trade blame as delegates make diplomatic visit to U.S. – CBS News










































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Tensions between India and Pakistan have simmered since escalating into missile attacks between the two rival nuclear powers last month. Now, delegations for each country are in the U.S. to make their case for America’s support. Shanelle Kaul reports on what’s at the heart of their decades-long standoff.

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India Rapidly Condemns Antisemitic D.C. Slaughter as Relationship with Israel Grows Closer

Indian Foreign Minister S Jaishankar on Thursday condemned the murder of two young Israeli diplomats in Washington, DC, “in the strongest terms” and said that “the perpetrators must be brought to justice.”

“Our thoughts and prayers are with their families and colleagues,” Jaishankar said.

“Thank you, dear friend!” Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar replied via social media.

The Indian and Israeli foreign ministers were discussing Wednesday night’s killing of Yaron Lischinsky, 30, and Sarah Lynn Milgrim, 26, reportedly by a 30-year-old left-wing pro-Hamas activist named Elias Rodriguez.

Lischinsky and Milgrim, a couple on the verge of becoming engaged, were both employed by the Israeli Embassy in Washington. Lischinsky, a Christian with dual Israeli and German citizenship, had been working as a research assistant at the embassy for several years. Milgrim was Jewish. She grew up in Kansas and joined the Israeli Embassy in D.C. in November 2023.

A man identified as Rodriguez, a resident of Chicago, was spotted lurking outside the Capital Jewish Museum before opening fire on a small group of people who emerged from a reception for young diplomats held inside. Lischinsky and Milgrim were hit by the volley of bullets at close range and killed.

Rodriguez reportedly entered the Capital Jewish Museum to be taken into custody, chanting “Free, free Palestine” and dropping a keffiyeh, the scarf that has come to be associated with Palestinian terrorism. The FBI is investigating his ties with far-left and pro-Palestinian groups. He was charged with two counts of first-degree murder on Thursday.

Israel and India have been developing a close friendship in recent years, including a military partnership. When India responded to a horrific attack by Pakistan-based terrorists this month, Israeli-made Harop “kamikaze drones” were prominent among the weapons they used. India is also a devoted customer for Israeli radar systems and precision-guided weapons.

The perpetrators of the attack, identified by India as an Islamist gang called Lashkar-e-Taiba, reportedly quizzed their victims by asking them questions about Muslim religious writings, and shot them dead when they could not answer correctly. One Muslim civilian was killed in the attack, a heroic pony-ride operator who attempted to subdue one of the heavily armed terrorists.

Israel strongly supported India’s response to the Kashmir atrocity. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “deeply saddened” by the “barbaric terrorist attack” on the Kashmir tourist haven of Pahalgam, and supported India’s right to respond.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims and their families. Israel stands with India in its fight against terrorism,” Netanyahu said.

Pakistani officials were enraged by the alliance between Israel and India, denouncing their friendship as an “axis of occupation” and comparing India’s presence in the disputed Kashmir province to Israel’s “occupation” of the Palestinians.

Indian Foreign Ministry spokesman Randhir Jaiswal on Thursday called the Washington, DC, terror attack “deeply shocking.”

“Those responsible for this heinous act must be brought to justice. Safety and security of diplomatic staff is paramount,” he said.

The Hindustan Times reported India is planning to ask U.S. officials for more security for its diplomats and embassy in Washington. A high-level Indian delegation is scheduled to visit Washington in June, and the Indian Foreign Ministry is said to be concerned about threats to their safety by Khalistani separatists.

“The security of our diplomats is a sensitive matter. We are having a close look at the issue after what happened to the two Israeli embassy officials,” said one of the Hindustan Times’ sources.



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21 people dead, 10 hospitalized after drinking tainted liquor in India; multiple arrests made

Twenty-one people have died in India and 10 are in the hospital after drinking tainted liquor, authorities said on Tuesday, updating the death toll. Nine people were in custody, police said.

Hundreds of people die every year in India from drinking cheap alcohol made in backstreet distilleries. Bootleggers sell vast quantities at cut rates to the poor, without paying taxes to the government.

To increase its potency, the liquor is often spiked with methanol that can cause blindness, liver damage and death.

The latest incident happened late on Monday after villagers in the Amritsar district, in the northern state of Punjab, drank liquor laced with methanol.

“Now death toll is 21. And 10 admitted in hospitals,” a public relations officer for the Amritsar district said in a statement.

Relatives grieve after the death of a man who consumed tainted liquor at Marari Kalan village on the outskirts of Amritsar on May 13, 2025. 

NARINDER NANU/AFP via Getty Images


Nine people have been arrested, Punjab police said in a post on social media.

An investigation is underway “to uncover the entire modus operandi and to bring all involved to justice,” the post said.

Punjab chief minister Bhagwant Mann said those responsible would be punished.

“We all stand united in grief — and in our resolve to ensure justice is served and such tragedies are prevented in the future,” Punjab police said.

Last year, 53 people were killed after drinking moonshine in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu.

In December 2022, more than 30 people died in the eastern Indian state of Bihar after consuming tainted alcohol. In July 2002, 28 people died and 60 became ill after drinking bootleg liquor in the western state of Gujarat, where the sale of alcohol is banned.

Last November in Laos, six tourists died from suspected methanol poisoning, state media reported.

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Trump set to depart Monday for first international trip of second term



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President Trump is set to depart Monday for the Middle East, the first international trip of his second term. His trip comes as his administration is at the center of three major international flashpoints: the Middle East, Russia and Ukraine and India and Pakistan. Imtiaz Tyab reports.

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India and Pakistan ceasefire shaken by overnight clashes in Kashmir, on the heels of U.S.-led deal

India’s military strikes into Pakistan-administered Kashmir and Pakistan earlier this week killed more than 100 militants, including their prominent leadership, India’s director general of military operations said on Sunday. His comments came just one day after India and Pakistan reached a ceasefire agreement following U.S.-led mediation talks.

Lt. Gen. Rajiv Ghai said India’s armed forces, during the recent violence, struck nine militant infrastructure and training facilities, including sites of the Lashkar-e-Taiba group that India blames for carrying out major militant strikes in India and the disputed region of Kashmir.

There was no way to independently verify these claims.

“We achieved total surprise,” Ghai said at a news conference in New Delhi, adding Pakistan’s response was “erratic and rattled.”

The two countries agreed to a truce on Saturday after talks with high-ranking U.S. officials to defuse the most serious military confrontation between them in decades. But the ceasefire was shaken just hours later by overnight fighting in disputed Kashmir, and both sides accused each other of repeatedly violating the deal. Drones were also spotted Saturday night over Indian-administered Kashmir and the western state of Gujarat, according to Indian officials.

Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri said late Saturday that “there had been repeated violations of the understanding arrived between the two countries” on ceasing fire and accused Pakistan of breaching the agreement.

People from Christian and Muslim communities hold a demonstration to show their support with Pakistan Army, a day after the ceasefire between Indian and Pakistan, in Lahore, Pakistan, Sunday, May 11, 2025.

K.M. Chaduary / AP


“We call upon Pakistan to take appropriate steps to address these violations and deal with the situation with seriousness and responsibility,” he said at a news conference in New Delhi. Misri said the Indian army was “retaliating” for what he called a “border intrusion.” In a statement shared on social media, India’s Chief of Army Staff granted army commanders full authority for “counteraction” to any violations of the deal.

Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry blamed Indian forces for initially violating the ceasefire and said Pakistan was committed to their agreement.

“We believe that any issues in the smooth implementation of the ceasefire should be addressed through communication at appropriate levels,” the ministry said.

The escalation in violence began last week after a gun massacre of tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir. India blamed the attack on Pakistan, which denied any involvement.

As part of the ceasefire, the nuclear-armed neighbors agreed to immediately stop all military action on land, in the air and at sea.

People on both sides of the Line of Control, which divides the territory, reported heavy exchanges of fire between Indian and Pakistani troops. The fighting subsided by Sunday morning.

People with national flags take part in a demonstration to show their support with Pakistan Army, a day after the ceasefire between Indian and Pakistan was announced, in Peshawar, Pakistan, Sunday, May 11, 2025.

Muhammad Sajjad / AP


In the Poonch area of Indian-administered Kashmir, people said the intense shelling from the past few days had traumatized them.

“Most people ran as shells were being fired,” said college student Sosan Zehra, who returned home Sunday. “It was completely chaotic.”

In Pakistan-administered Kashmir’s Neelum Valley, which is 2 miles from the Line of Control, residents said there were exchanges of fire and heavy shelling after the ceasefire began.

“We were happy about the announcement but, once again, the situation feels uncertain,” said Mohammad Zahid.

U.S. President Trump was the first to post about the ceasefire deal, announcing it on his Truth Social platform. Indian and Pakistani officials confirmed the news shortly after.

Pakistan has thanked the U.S., and especially Mr. Trump, several times for facilitating the ceasefire.

India has not said anything about Mr. Trump or the U.S. since the deal was announced. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi chaired a meeting on Sunday with top government and military officials.

A Pakistani reads a morning newspaper at a stall, a day after the ceasefire between Indian and Pakistan was announced, in Peshawar, Pakistan, Sunday, May 11, 2025.

Muhammad Sajjad / AP


A U.N. spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, said on Sunday that Secretary General Antonio Guterres welcomed the deal as a positive step toward easing tensions.

“He hopes the agreement will contribute to lasting peace and foster an environment conducive to addressing broader, longstanding issues between the two countries,” Dujarric said.

India and Pakistan’s top military officials are scheduled to speak on Monday.

India and Pakistan have fought daily since Wednesday along the rugged and mountainous Line of Control, which is marked by razor wire coils, watchtowers and bunkers that snake across foothills populated by villages, tangled bushes and forests.

They have routinely blamed the other for starting the skirmishes, while insisting they were only retaliating.

Kashmir is split between the two countries and claimed by both in its entirety. China also claims part of Kashmir, but is not involved in the fighting.

India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over the region and their ties have been shaped by conflict, aggressive diplomacy and mutual suspicion, mostly due to their competing claims.

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British-India Deal Spikes Worries About Trump H-1B Giveaway

India’s government has just signed a deal with the United Kingdom that allows more Indian graduates to take more white-collar jobs from British graduates.

The deal is “truly appalling,” said Nigel Farage, leader of the fast-rising, anti-migration Reform UK party. The government has “betrayed working Britain” by giving Indian white-collar workers a 20 percent price advantage over similar Brits in jobs, he said.

But the deal is also bad news for American graduates because it may be similar to the still-secret trade deal that President Donald Trump is negotiating with Indian government officials.

“Hopefully, @POTUS and JDVance will not be willing to screw American workers in a US trade deal with India,” said a May 7 tweet from the Immigration Accountability Project.

“We’ve heard nothing out of this administration so far that would indicate to me they are serious about doing anything about employment visas that are displacing Americans,” said Kevin Lynn, founder of U.S. Tech Workers. He added:

We’re not seeing anything coming out of India saying that they’re aghast that the U.S. is looking to curb these employment visa programs.

Indian officials have been pressuring Trump to welcome many more mixed-skill Indian graduates into the U.S. white-collar jobs, many of which are already closed to Americans because of ethnic hiring networks created by Indian managers within the Fortune 500.

Also, U.S. lobbies welcome the Indian migrant workers because they provide India with billions of dollars in remittances needed to buy U.S. weapons, grain, energy, and technology that the U.S. hopes to sell via the trade deal. Under President Joe Biden, the U.S. dramatically expanded visa awards to Indians, including the B-1 visitor visas used by Indians to get truck-driving jobs in the United States.

So far, U.S. officials have remained tight-lipped about the pending U.S.-India deal.

Trump and his deputies — including Vice President JD Vance and top policy aide Stephen Miller — know the unpopularity of the Indian inflow of mixed-skilled, white-collar workers.

It is unpopular because millions of subservient foreign workers have been imported by companies to displace millions of American graduates in technology, engineering, management, finance, and increasingly in accounting. Top executives and investors import the workers via the multi-year H-1B, J-1, L-1, H4EAD, CPT, and OPT programs that dangle the promise of citizenship in front of desperate migrants.

For example, many young American graduates are being pushed out of career-starting jobs by the annual flood of roughly 300,000 foreign graduates who get work permits via the “F-1 Optional Practical Training” program. The program was created by President George W. Bush — without approval from Congress — and rewards companies that hire Indian graduates by exempting them from Social Security or Medicare taxes. It also allows foreign-born hiring managers to favor home-country job-seekers and to discriminate against American graduates.

At least 1.5 million white-collar jobs are now held by college-graduate migrants. In 2024, President Joe Biden’s deputies made it even easier for more Indian students to get white collars jobs.

Unsurprisingly, many recent or pending American graduates are alarmed and despondent over their failure to get jobs or even internships.

Computer professional Jim from Herndon told Breitbart that he has a nephew who graduated last year with a degree in engineering and computers, and a nephew who is about to graduate with a degree in Geographic Information Systems: “They found nothing, so they think they’ll be doing lifeguarding in the summer.”

Graduates “only have two years after they graduate to get a pipeline [career-starting job, and then [recruiters] move on to the next new grads,” he said. In contrast, his two nieces with degrees in sociology and film studies landed administration and marketing jobs for roughly $100,000, he added.

“Something strange, and potentially alarming, is happening to the job market for young, educated workers,” the Atlantic magazine reported in April:

According to the New York Federal Reserve, labor conditions for recent college graduates have “deteriorated noticeably” in the past few months, and the unemployment rate now stands at an unusually high 5.8 percent. Even newly minted M.B.A.s from elite programs are struggling to find work. Meanwhile, law-school applications are surging—an ominous echo of when young people used graduate school to bunker down during the great financial crisis.

The NAFTA-like displacement has also wrecked professionalism, productivity, and innovation in many U.S. companies, so helping China’s workforce to close the once-huge technology gap with America.

The workplace problems caused by the mixed-skill migrants are so bad that some companies are trying to reduce their reliance on the counterproductive Indian visa workers.

The concerns about a white-collar NAFTA rose this week when Trump told reporters that India has agreed to drop tariffs on U.S. goods to zero.  “They’ll drop it to nothing,” Trump said in a White House media interaction alongside Canada’s Mark Carney. “They’ve already agreed.”

Reuters reported on May 9:

India has offered to slash its tariff gap with the U.S. to less than 4% from nearly 13% now, in exchange for an exemption from President Donald Trump’s “current and potential” tariff hikes, two sources said, as both nations move fast to clinch a deal.

Indians are unlikely to remove their tariffs without a U.S. concession — such as more white-collar jobs for Indian graduates, said Lynn. The Indians are “dropping tariffs to zero on American products that they have no intention of buying, and if they do, they’ll be buying with salaries taken from American [professionals],” he said.

India must demand more American jobs because its economic growth is built on its legal and illegal migrants who send remittances and outsourcing jobs back to India. The dependence on U.S. jobs was described in a May 5 article in Bloomberg:

“Everyone goes to the US to make money, and most of that money comes back to India,” says Jayesh Patel, whose entire family left the country. Patel, who runs a water bottling plant in Gujarat’s capital, Ahmedabad, frequently visits his native village to watch over the family’s land. “Everything here—the roads, temples, schools—it all comes from dollars.”

Mahindra Vithal Das, 65, who lives in Gujarat’s Mehsana district, has … two sons. Both made harrowing and expensive journeys to reach the US, where they work [illegally] in convenience stores and send money home to support Das and his wife.

However, in the talk with the Brits, the Indians dropped their demand for more migration because of pressure from Farage’s rising Reform UK party.

But their UK-India agreement also hides the tax-break gain that will likely allow more U.K. jobs to be taken from young British professionals and be given, at lower wages, to desperate Indian migrants delivered by multinational outsourcing companies.

The deal includes a huge “Double Contribution Convention” clause that allows Indian migrants to avoid paying a healthcare tax, dubbed the “National Insurance” tax. This tax giveaway ensures that British employers will hire low-tax Indians at less cost than Brits who must pay the tax as well as their higher college debts.

British officials insist the tax break is fair because it also would apply to any British people who were hired for jobs in India’s low-wage economy, and it only covers workers who hold jobs with transnational Indian companies.

Yet Indian officials are describing the deal as a “huge” win for their white-collar outsourcing industry: “In an unprecedented achievement, India has secured an exemption for Indian workers who are temporarily in the UK and their employers from paying social security contributions in the UK for a period of three years under the Double Contribution Convention. This will make Indian service providers significantly more competitive in the UK.”

The deal will also “greater global mobility for aspirational young Indians,” the pro-migration government declared, adding: “The FTA eases mobility for professionals including Contractual Service Suppliers; Business Visitors; Investors; Intra-Corporate Transferees; partners and dependent children of Intra-Corporate Transferees with right to work; and Independent Professionals like yoga instructors, musicians and chefs.”

The Indian officials say the deal will also help Indian companies sell services into the U.K. market: “India has secured significant commitments on digitally delivered services for Indian service suppliers, especially in professional services such as architecture and engineering, computer related services and telecommunication services.”

“The mobility chapter of the deal [is] meant to smooth the way for more inter-company transfers,” the Indian press release said, without directly saying that more Indian graduates will be able to take jobs and salaries from U.K. graduates.

In. D.C., U.S. officials have given little indication that they would welcome more Indian white-collar workers, and are promising to raise Americans’ productivity and wages.

“Over one in ten young adults in America are neither employed, in higher education, nor pursuing some sort of vocational training,” White House spokesman Kush Desai told Axios on May 7. “There is no shortage of American minds and hands to grow our labor force, and President Trump’s executive order to modernize workforce training programs represents this Administration’s commitment to capitalizing on that untapped potential,” he added.

The promise of cheap labor is ” a drug that too many American firms got addicted to … [and] globalization’s hunger for cheap labor is a problem precisely because it’s been bad for innovation,” Vance told investors at the American Dynamism Summit in March. He added:

Real innovation makes us more productive, but it also, I think, dignifies our workers.  It boosts our standard of living.  It strengthens our workforce and the relative value of its labor.

 



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Trump praised as peacemaker amid escalating India-Pakistan tensions



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Hours after President Trump posted about a “full and immediate ceasefire” between India and Pakistan, blasts rocked at least two cities in Kashmir. Dozens have died in the past week. Ramy Inocencio reports.

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Pakistan says India has fired missiles on its air bases as conflict escalates

India fired missiles at three air bases inside Pakistan but most of the missiles were intercepted, Pakistan’s army spokesman said Saturday. It’s the latest escalation in a conflict triggered by a gun massacre last month that India blames Pakistan for.

State-run Pakistan Television immediately said that retaliatory attacks were underway targeting “multiple locations in India.” Pakistan’s military says it targeted an Indian missile storage facility and airbases in Pathankot and Udhampur.

Pakistani army spokesman, Lt. Gen. Ahmad Sharif, said in a televised address that the country’s air force assets were safe following the Indian strikes. He added that some of the Indian missiles also hit India’s eastern Punjab.

“This is a provocation of the highest order,” Sharif said.

The Indian missiles targeted Nur Khan air base in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, Murid air base in Chakwal city and Rafiqui air base in the Jhang district of eastern Punjab province, according to the spokesman. There was no immediate comment from India.

Sharif said some of the Indian missiles also went into Afghanistan.

“I want to give you the shocking news that India fired six ballistic missiles from its city of Adampur,” said Sharif. One of the ballistic missiles hit Adampur, the remaining five missiles hit the Indian Punjab area of Amritsar.”

The Indian army said in a statement late Friday that drones were sighted in 26 locations across many areas Indian states bordering Pakistan and Indian-controlled Kashmir, including region’s Srinagar main city. It said the drones were tracked and engaged.

“The situation is under close and constant watch, and prompt action is being taken wherever necessary,” the statement said.

Tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals have soared since an attack at a popular tourist site in India-controlled Kashmir left 26 civilians dead, mostly Hindu Indian tourists, on April 22. New Delhi has blamed Pakistan for backing the assault, an accusation Islamabad rejects.

On Wednesday, India conducted airstrikes on several sites in Pakistani territory it described as militant-related, killing 31 civilians, according to Pakistani officials. Pakistan said it shot down five Indian fighter jets.

On Thursday, India said it thwarted Pakistani drone and missile attacks at military targets in more than a dozen cities and towns, including Jammu city in Indian-controlled Kashmir. Pakistan denied that it carried out drone attacks. India said, meanwhile, that it hit Pakistan’s air defense systems and radars close to the city of Lahore. The incidents could not be independently confirmed.

India and Pakistan have already fought three wars over the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir. Both nations claim all of Kashmir as their own territory, but each controls only part of it. Another, northeastern portion of the region is administered by China, which has long been a point of friction between Delhi and Beijing.

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