Pakistan Kills 33 Militants While Crossing From Afghanistan, Accused Of Being Sponsored By India

JAKARTA - Pakistan's security forces killed 33 militants who tried to cross from Afghanistan last night. This militant is called Pakistan 'sponsored' India.

Reported by Reuters on Friday, August 8, the militants were intercepted and involved in a "presidency" firefight, the military said. In this shootout, weapons, ammunition, and explosives were found.

Pakistan and India, a neighboring nuclear-armed country that has a history of conflict, often accuse each other of supporting the rebels. New Delhi denies supporting militants in Pakistan.

Earlier, Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs responded to a statement by the Indian Interior Minister about the troops killing three Pakistanis suspected of being involved in an attack on Hindu tourists in the Jammu federal region and operandi in April "full of engineering."

Indian Interior Minister Amit Shah told parliament the three militants who were killed in a shootout in themal forest this week were the perpetrators of the April 22 attack. According to him, New Delhi has found evidence to support it.

At the attack, the forwards were Pakistani citizens opening fire in a valley popular among tourists in the beautiful mountain area of Palaligam in koordination, before fleeing into the pine forest in the vicinity.

Islam-subjected Pakistan has denied involvement in the attack the worst attacks on civilians in India since the 2008 Mumbai attack and requested an independent investigation.

The four-day fighting between the two hostile and nuclear-armed countries was the worst in decades.