Monday 26 February 2018

A pact that no longer act

Even after a ceasefire pact in 2003 between India and Pakistan, Indian troops, almost every day, has been struggling with the bullets and grenades coming from across the border, unmasking Pakistan’s feigning stand behind its claim of being a peaceful nation. The recent violations do not imply that the pact was an unproductive move, given the fact that the era after the pact witnessed the less exchange of fire than the era before the pact. But, the unprovoked violation of ceasefire from Pakistan in the past few years and heavy shelling on the border villages, that left hundreds of innocent people died unwarrantable, has put all the ceasefire pacts and hopes to rekindle the relationships between the two nations on the shelf.

The relations of the two nations, since partition, has witnessed a spate of drastic turns,  discontents and plots, often, took the shape of wars and resulted into heavy physical and economic loss bore by both the nations, consequently. With this unfortunate history, the sour relationship can’t be described as a surprise. What more piercing is that how could a nation, to pump in the terrorists in another, resort to firing and shelling?

It’s been exposed umpteen times that how Pakistani troops have been, irrelevantly, opening fire at Indian posts and villages, adjacent to the border. But, practically the firing is not irrelevant as it has the relevance to helping out the terrorists and intruders infiltrating into Indian borders.

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