Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pakistan frees Indian pilot

Islamabad government deems move a ‘gesture of peace’

- ASHOK SHARMA AND ZAHEER BABAR Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Kathy Gannon, Munir Ahmed, Roshan Mughal and Aijaz Hussain of The Associated Press.

People in Jammu, India, wait Friday for Indian air force pilot Abhinandan Varthaman to be released from Pakistan’s custody. Varthaman, who was shot down this week on the Pakistani-held side of Kashmir, later was set free at a border crossing in what Pakistan described as a “gesture of peace.”

WAGAH, Pakistan — Pakistan handed over a captured Indian air force pilot to Indian officials at a border crossing on Friday, a “gesture of peace” by Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan aimed at defusing an escalation between the nuclear-armed neighbors over the disputed region of Kashmir.

The pilot, identified as Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, walked across the border near the Pakistani town of Wagah after being taken in a convoy earlier in the day from the eastern city of Lahore, escorted by military vehicles and soldiers, their weapons drawn. Dressed in a blue blazer and gray dress pants, he was greeted by Indian policemen and military personnel on the Indian side.

The freed pilot was scheduled to undergo a detailed medical exam before boarding a flight from Amritsar, near the India-Pakistan border, to New Delhi for a debriefing with top air force officials about his captivity.

“The nation is proud of your exemplary courage,” Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in a tweet.

The Pakistani military has said it shot down Varthaman’s MiG-21 fighter jet on the Pakistani-held side of Kashmir on Wednesday and that the pilot safely ejected.

In a message aired on Pakistani television, Varthaman was seen in his green flight suit saying he was rescued by two Pakistani military personnel when he ejected and found himself in Pakistani-controlled territory surrounded by a group of angry residents. It was not clear when he recorded the statement, but it happened while he was in the custody of the Pakistani military.

Varthaman was accompanie­d to the border Friday by the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross. His handover took several hours as procedures including a checkup to verify his health and medical condition were completed before he was turned over to Indian officials.

Earlier in the day, the road on the Indian side of the border had been lined with well-wishers, but by the time Varthaman crossed around 9 p.m. most of them had left.

The handover came against the backdrop of blistering cross-border attacks across the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir that continued for a fourth straight day, even as the two nuclear-armed neighbors sought to defuse their most serious confrontat­ion in two decades. Tensions have been running high since Indian aircraft crossed into Pakistan on Tuesday carrying out what India called a pre-emptive strike against militants blamed for a Feb. 14 suicide bombing in Indian-controlled Kashmir that killed 40 Indian troops. Pakistan retaliated, shooting down the MiG-21 fighter jet Wednesday and capturing Varthaman.

Since the escalation, world leaders have scrambled to head off an all-out war between the archrivals. President Donald Trump, in Hanoi on Thursday, said he had been involved in seeking to de-escalate the conflict.

Khan announced in parliament Thursday that the pilot would be returned, calling the release “a goodwill gesture.”

But India made clear there could be no conditions attached to the pilot’s return, and that the latest escalation had changed its strategy. Going forward, Indian officials said they would strike targets, including those inside Pakistani territory, if officials receive intelligen­ce of planned attacks.

Despite the pilot’s return, the path forward was uncertain for two countries that have faced off for years along the Kashmir boundary known as the Line of Control, in one of the world’s most volatile regions.

“Let us hope this momentum created by the release of Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman translates into something long-term in terms of securing peace,” said Amitabh Mattoo, a professor of disarmamen­t studies at New Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru University. “We will have to wait and see.”

Also Friday, Pakistan’s civil aviation authority partially re-opened the country’s airspace, allowing commercial passenger travel to four major cities, another sign that tensions with India were de-escalating.

The agency said in a statement that all domestic and internatio­nal flights would resume to and from the cities of Karachi, Islamabad, Peshawar and Quetta. It said other airports, including one in the eastern city of Lahore that borders India, would remain closed until Monday.

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AP/CHANNI ANAND
 ?? AP/PRABHJOT GILL ?? The convoy carrying Indian air force pilot Abhinandan Varthaman leaves a checkpoint Friday on the Indian side of the border after his release from Pakistan.
AP/PRABHJOT GILL The convoy carrying Indian air force pilot Abhinandan Varthaman leaves a checkpoint Friday on the Indian side of the border after his release from Pakistan.

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