How India and Pakistan share one of the world's most dangerous borders
-
How India and Pakistan share one of the world's most dangerous borders
The recent escalation after the Pahalgam attack brought India and Pakistan to the brink once again. Shells rained down on both sides of the LoC, turning homes to rubble and lives into statistics. At least 16 people were reportedly killed on the Indian side, while Pakistan claims 40 civilian deaths, though it remains unclear how many were directly caused by the shelling.
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_watch_thunderbolts_2025_fullmovie_available_now_online_streaming__gvvcnk1s4rldpkekfyqow
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_sinners_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_thunderbolts_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_watch_final_destination_6_bloodlines_2025_fullmovie_available_now_online_streaming
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_the_accountant_2_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_clown_in_a_cornfield_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_shadow_force_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_the_king_of_kings_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h
https://www.utgop.org/zoanna/_until_dawn_fullmovie_fr_e_downl_ad_1080_720_h"Families on the LoC are subjected to Indian and Pakistani whims and face the brunt of heated tensions," Anam Zakaria, a Pakistani writer based in Canada, told the BBC.
"Each time firing resumes many are thrust into bunkers, livestock and livelihood is lost, infrastructure - homes, hospitals, schools - is damaged. The vulnerability and volatility experienced has grave repercussions for their everyday lived reality," Ms Zakaria, author of a book on Pakistan-administered Kashmir, said.
India and Pakistan share a 3,323km (2,064-mile) border, including the 740km-long LoC; and the International Border (IB), spanning roughly 2,400km. The LoC began as the Ceasefire Line in 1949 after the first India-Pakistan war, and was renamed under the 1972 Simla Agreement.
The LoC cutting through Kashmir - claimed in full and administered in parts by both India and Pakistan - remains one of the most militarised borders in the world. Conflict is never far behind and ceasefires are only as durable as the next provocation.
Ceasefire violations here can range from "low-level firing to major land grabbing to surgical strikes", says Happymon Jacob, a foreign policy expert at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU). (A land grab could involve seizing key positions such as hilltops, outposts, or buffer zones by force.)
The LoC, many experts say, is a classic example of a "border drawn in blood, forged through conflict". It is also a line, as Ms Zakaria says, "carved by India and Pakistan, and militarised and weaponised, without taking Kashmiris into account".