India’s Q3 GDP Growth Slowest in Five Quarters

Quarterly growth slowed down to 6.6%, according to data released by the government on Thursday.

New Delhi: India’s economic growth in the October-December quarter of the 2018-2019 financial year (FY) was the slowest recorded in five quarters, government data released on Thursday evening has revealed.

The gross domestic product (GDP) for the FY rose by 6.6% in the third quarter on the back of lower consumer spending and slightly less growth in the agricultural and manufacturing sectors.

In the first and second quarters, the GDP growth was recorded at 8.2% and 7.1%, which were revised downwards on Thursday to 8% and 7% respectively.

Slower growth in the third quarter, along with the downward revisions for the first and second quarters, has brought down the overall projection for growth in 2018-2019 to 7% from the earlier estimate of 7.2%.

In GVA (gross value added) terms, the Indian economy grew at 6.3% in Q3 FY’19.

Statistics ministry data also showed that the growth decline was also impacted by a slowdown in investments and consumer spending.

According to Reuters, consumer spending, which accounts for almost 60% of the economy, “slowed to an 8.4%  rise annually in Q3, compared to a revised 9.9% rise in the previous quarter”.

Gross fixed capital formation – which include infrastructure spending – rose 10.6%  compared with a revised 10.2% annual increase in the previous quarter.

Table – 1 India’s Economic Growth Trends Over Past Quarters

Financial Quarter GDP Growth GVA Growth
Q2 FY’18 6.3% 6.1%
Q3 FY’18 7.0% 6.6%
Q4 FY’18 7.7% 7.6%
Q1 FY’19 8.2%* 8%
Q2 FY’19 7.1%* 6.9%
Q3 FY’19 6.6% 6.3%

*These figures have now been revised. (See Table 2)

Table – 2 – Revisions in Quarterly GDP Data

Financial Quarter Earlier GDP Growth Revised GDP Growth
Q1 FY’19 8.2% 8.0%
Q2 FY’19 7.1% 7.0%

Rupa Rege Nitsure, group chief economist at L&T Finance Holdings said in a statement, “I had expected the overall GDP growth for FY19 to get revised downwards, as the farm sector had suffered due to extremely uneven rainfall, depleted water reservoir levels in key agrarian states and their impact on sowing of foodgrains.”

“Manufacturing and small services too had slowed due to a crisis of confidence for the NBFC sector during September to December 2018. The GDP data has correctly captured these events that had impacted growth. In retrospect, the RBI’s policy actions on February 7 get strongly vindicated,” Nitsure added.

According to the government’s figures, the agriculture sector grew at 2.7% in Q3 compared to 4.2% in Q2, while manufacturing grew at 6.7% in Q3 compared to 6.9% in Q2.

(With Reuters inputs)

After Airstrikes, World and Neighbours Call for Restraint and Dialogue

Most countries asked the two nations to find ways to maintain peace, while some also condemned the Pulwama terror attack.

New Delhi: Following the airstrikes by India and the retaliation by Pakistan, there has been “concerned” statements at the “escalation”, coupled with calls for “restraint” and resumption of dialogue to New Delhi and Islamabad from world capitals and in South Asia.

China

At Wuzhen, Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi said that China was “worried” about the current tensions between the South Asian nations. He called upon them to exercise restraint and avoid further escalation. “As a common friend of India and Pakistan, we hope that the two sides can find out the truth through dialogue, control the situation, solve problems, and jointly safeguard regional peace and stability. China is willing to play a constructive role in this regard,” he said.

The US

There had been no official statements after the Pakistan action, but after the Indian airstrikes, US secretary of state Mike Pompeo had spoken to both the Indian and Pakistani foreign ministers.  

“I expressed to both Ministers that we encourage India and Pakistan to exercise restraint, and avoid escalation at any cost. I also encouraged both Ministers to prioritize direct communication and avoid further military activity,” said a press statement from Pompeo dated February 26. This was released on Wednesday morning India time. After a few hours, Pakistan conducted a retaliatory airstrike into Kashmir.

US President Donald Trump indicated on Thursday that the US has been “involved” in managing the escalating tension between India and Pakistan, and that “reasonably decent” and “reasonably attractive has been received” that the current face-off “will be coming to an end”.

Also on Wednesday, the US pressed Pakistan to abide by its commitments to the UN Security Council, and act against terrorists operating from the country. This was after India handed to Pakistan a dossier on the involvement of the Jaish-e-Muhammed (JeM) in the Pulwama terror attack on February 14, 2019, and on the presence of JeM camps on Pakistani soil.

The UK

During Question Time in parliament on Wednesday, British prime minister Theresa May said UK is “deeply concerned about rising tensions between India and Pakistan and urgently calls for restraint on both sides to avoid further escalation”.

Also Read: Imran Khan Calls for Better Sense to Prevail; India Protests ‘Vulgar Display’ of Indian Pilot

“We are in regular contact with both countries urging dialogue and diplomatic solutions to ensure regional stability. We are working closely with international partners, including through the UN Security Council, to de-escalate tensions and are monitoring developments closely and considering implications for British nationals,” she said.

France

French foreign ministry expressed concern at the “deteriorating situation”. “It (France) calls on Pakistan and India to de-escalate the situation,” added the statement.

The French ministry for Europe and foreign affairs is “closely monitoring the situation”. France also said that their embassies were ready to help their citizens in case of need.

Russia

As per a report in Tass, Russian President’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov called on “India and Pakistan for restraint in connection with the border incident”.

Russia is concerned about the aggravation of relations between India and Pakistan and calls on both sides to show restraint, Peskov told reporters. “We are extremely concerned about the news coming in, we are very closely monitoring the situation and, of course, we urge all parties to show restraint,” said a Kremlin spokesman.

The Russian foreign ministry also stated it was worried about the “aggravation” on the Line of Control and the outbreak of tension.

“We call on both sides to show restraint and step up efforts to resolve existing problems by political and diplomatic means. We are ready to further assist in strengthening the counter-terrorism potential of New Delhi and Islamabad,” added the Russian foreign ministry

The European Union

The EU’s high representative on foreign affairs and security policy, Federica Mogherini said that the military escalation “has the potential to lead to serious and dangerous consequences for the two countries and the wider region”.

She urged for both states to exercise “exercise utmost restraint” and avoid further escalation. “To this end, the resumption of diplomatic contacts at political level and implementation of urgent measures by both sides is vital,” she added.

Stating terrorism can never be justified, Mogherini recalled that she had conveyed to Pakistan foreign minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi that Islamabad needs to take “clear and targeted actions related to all forms of terrorist activity”.

The European Union will remain in contact with both countries and will continue to closely monitor the situation.

Iran

According Iranian news agency Irna, foreign minister Javad Zarif spoke to Pakistani foreign minister SM Qureshi and asked the two countries to exercise self-restraint.

Iranian foreign ministry spokesperson Bahram Qasemi also “expressed deep regret over escalation of tensions at borders and the military showdown between India and Pakistan”. As per Irna, Qasemi asked them “both to consider complicated conditions in the region which is mostly aimed at increasing insecurity, instability and due to foreign intervention”.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. Credit: Reuters

Nepal

Two south Asian neighbours also expressed their anxiety that the India-Pakistan tensions could impact the region.

“The Government of Nepal is concerned about the escalating tensions between India and Pakistan following the terrorist attack on security convoy in Pulwama in Jammu and Kashmir on February 14, 2019,” said a press release of the Nepal foreign ministry.

Recalling that Nepal had condemned the “heinous terrorist act”, the Himalayan national called on both countries exercise “utmost restraint” and seek a solution “through dialogue”.

As the current Chair of SAARC, Nepal, while underlining the importance of peace and stability in South Asia, calls on both sides to exercise utmost restraint and not engage in actions that would threaten peace and security in the region. It also urges them to seek solution through dialogue and peaceful means in order to ease tension and normalise the situation.

Sri Lanka

Just like Nepal, Sri Lanka also commented on the latest tensions in South Asia by first mentioning that they had condemned the Pulwama attack.

“As a country that has suffered from the scourge of terrorism for nearly three decades, Sri Lanka has unequivocally condemned this terrorist attack in Pulwama and stands firmly by the fight against terrorism in all its forms and manifestations,” said a statement issued by the Sri Lankan ministry of foreign affairs on Wednesday.

Stating that it was “deeply concerned” about developments post-Pulwama attack, the statement said that Sri Lanka “strongly supports peace and stability in the South Asia region and all endeavours towards the diffusion of tensions, including the resolution of bilateral problems through dialogue and building confidence”.

“In this context, Sri Lanka requests India and Pakistan to act in a manner that ensures the security, peace and stability of the entire region,” said the MFA.

Maldives

The Indian ocean nation also expressed deep concern at the “escalation of tensions” between India and Pakistan.

Underlining its support to combating terrorism, Maldives foreign ministry’s statement said that Maldives “resolutely and unequivocally condemns terrorism in all its forms and manifestations, including cross-border terrorism, and underlines the urgency of States taking meaningful action against terrorist groups operating on their soil.”

“The Maldives is fully committed to the fight against terrorism and will continue to work closely with the international community, especially with its South Asian neighbours, in eliminating this global menace,” it said.

Maldives urged both India and Pakistan to have utmost restraint and “to preserve the stability, peace and security in the region”. “It is important to seek a speedy resolution to the current crisis through diplomacy and dialogue,” said the Maldivian foreign ministry.

Germany

Germany, while expressing concern at the situation, said that it was up to India and Pakistan “to use the utmost circumspection to ensure that this does not lead to a confrontation between the two countries”.

The country also said that Pakistan needs to combat terrorism on the ground. “In Pakistan, too, every effort must be made to ensure that terrorist organisations, which are known to have their base in Pakistan, are not only not able to carry out their nefarious deeds there, but are in fact combated. And also, once the evidence is furnished, that those responsible for the terrible attack in Kashmir are held to account and do not walk free.”

Doctors Confirm ‘Semi-Identical’ Twins Born From One Egg and Two Sperm

A new study suggests that such twins are extraordinarily rare.

Reuters: Doctors in Australia say they have identified a second case of twins apparently created from one egg and two sperm, a boy-girl combination in whom the mother’s DNA is identical in both babies but the father’s DNA varies in each twin.

They’re being called semi-identical twins and a new study in the New England Journal of Medicine suggests that such twins are extraordinarily rare. The only other reported case was uncovered in 2007.

Virtually all twins are either fraternal (where two eggs and two sperm have created two separate embryos) or identical (where one embryo splits in two before resuming normal development for each child).

“This is confirming there is this third type of twinning where it’s not fraternal and it’s not identical. It’s this strange place in between,” chief author Dr Michael Terrence Gabbett of Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane told Reuters Health in a telephone interview.

Each sperm cell contains half the father’s DNA. But it’s not identical from sperm to sperm because each man is a mixture of the genetic material from his parents, and each time a slightly different assortment of that full DNA set gets divided to go into a sperm.

For example, some sperm will contain a copy of the father’s Y chromosome that makes the child develop into a boy and some will carry the father’s X chromosome, which makes the child a girl.

In the case of the Australian twins, who live in Brisbane and are now four-and-a-half years old, the mother’s egg was fertilised with one sperm carrying an X chromosome and one with a Y. Because an ultrasound taken early in the pregnancy showed that both fetuses shared the same placenta, doctors assumed the fetuses were identical twins.

But when an ultrasound eight weeks later revealed that one child was male and the other female, something considered impossible for identical twins, the Gabbett team knew something extraordinary had happened.

The researchers say it appears that after fertilisation, the DNA from the egg and two sperm divided, then got divvied up to create three embryos. Two of these had enough egg DNA and sperm DNA to make viable embryos. The remaining embryo, with only sperm DNA, was not viable.

The twin boy and girl were found to have 100% of their mother’s DNA in common, but were only 78% identical in the paternal DNA they carry.

The only other reported instance of so-called sesquizygotic twins was identified in 2007. They were brought to the attention of doctors because one had ambiguous genitalia.

To see if the phenomenon might be more common than doctors believed, the Gabbett team examined an international database of 968 fraternal twins and their parents. None showed the same pattern.

Because of the odd combination of DNA picked up from the two sperm, doctors have been concerned that the twins might be vulnerable to cancer of the reproductive organs.

“It turned out that the girl just had some changes in her ovary that people weren’t comfortable with, so, unfortunately, she had to have her ovaries out,” Gabbett said. “The boy is continuing to have his testes monitored” with ultrasound.

The girl also developed a blood clot in her arm, but that’s not considered to be related to the unorthodox fertilisation.

“Otherwise,” Gabbett said, “the two twins are beautiful kids, well and healthy.”

Subcontinent on the Brink of War: Why the Present Standoff Is Different

While Pakistan’s army has harboured jihadis for decades, the desire for gains in the impending Indian elections adds to the volatility of the crisis.

About two decades after the Kargil war, the subcontinent is again on the brink of war. One miscalculation by either India or Pakistan can plunge the region into a massive misfortune.

What is qualitatively different between Kargil – the last large-scale conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbors – and today, is the rapidly evolving nature of the conflict. In Kargil, Pakistan had already taken the initiative and committed both its regulars and jihadi mercenaries to the conflict. India, taken by surprise, had no choice but to respond and, to do so forcefully.

The conflict was a fait accompli, so to speak, for the then Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP) government. This inherently absolved it of the worries about an escalation and its fallout. The BJP government then, did not have the luxury of choosing the time, place, targets and scale. It had to do what it had to do. The theatre and the required response had been defined for them by the Pakistani incursion.

The February 14 Pulwama attack on the Indian military, claimed by the Pakistan-based terrorist group Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM), on the other hand, has put the BJP’s incumbent government in the hot seat. It has to decide the type, timing and scale of the response, and then live with its domestic and diplomatic consequences.

What the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi does – or doesn’t do – could not only make his domestic political fortunes sink or swim, but can also change the broader regional paradigm for the foreseeable future.

The Modi Doctrine

The Modi Doctrine, though never christened or defined as such, had envisaged not only India’s engagement and collaboration with the Asian and western powers, but also asserting its preeminence as a regional, if not an international, power.

If the 2016 Uri attack had challenged Modi’s macho man, hyper-nationalist, muscle-brandishing imaging, the Pulwama bombing has put a serious question mark on it. Pakistan and its jihadist quislings have little to gain in tactical, strategic and geopolitical terms from the Pulwama attack, other than to keep the Kashmir pot simmering.

But PM Modi stands to lose face and possibly an election in three months if he is seen as a weakling. As The Wire has pointed out, just like the so-called surgical strikes after the Uri attack were no deterrent, a half-hearted attempt to recalibrate the red lines vis-à-vis Pakistan would reinforce the status quo ante, not redefine it.

Also Read: Pakistan’s Obligations to IAF Pilot in Custody Under the Geneva Convention

The undeclared Indian objective behind the Indian Air Force’s (IAF) foray into the Pakistani mainland was to underscore that despite the nuclear capabilities of the two countries, a conventional deterrence – without crossing the nuclear threshold – against jihadist terrorism, was still possible.

India’s claims to have bombed a JeM madrassa in Balakot and killing over 300 jihadists or their abettors are bloated and unverifiable. What Pakistan’s director general of Inter-Services Public Relations (DG ISPR), Major General Asif Ghafoor, conceded though, was that the IAF planes penetrated clear into Pakistan-proper, dropped bombs and returned home safely.

By this concession, the general also painted the Pakistani military into a corner, the only way out of which was a retaliatory response. Inevitably, the Pakistan Air Force (PAF), which has long history of cleaning up after its ground compadres mess things up, sprang into action and inflicted on the IAF its first losses. It purportedly also lost one of its own aircraft.

PM Modi faces an imminent loss of face after the PAF brought down two Indian MiG-21s. One Indian pilot was captured and paraded on camera by the Pakistani army, thereby making him a public curiosity. This also most likely violated international law of war.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Credit: PTI

Volatile nature of conflict

The actions by the two belligerents have so far been relatively reciprocal. But they also underscore the highly fluid and volatile nature of this conflict and the potential for it to spiral out of hand. At the time of writing, Pakistani airspace was largely closed in anticipation of an Indian response.

For better or for worse, PM Modi has tied his domestic political destiny to the outcome of the current crisis. This is what differentiates the current morass from the past standoffs, skirmishes and outright wars between the two countries. While all overt wars were fought when a military dictator ruled Pakistan, India has always had a statesman at the helm at those times, whether it was Jawaharlal Nehru in 1947-48, Lal Bahadur Shastri in 1965 or Indira Gandhi in 1971. Even in the undeclared Kargil war of 1999, India was steered by Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s steady hand.

The difference between the Indian leadership of then and now is that the past leaders were concerned about a political legacy of peace and stability, not an electoral glory. The desire for gains in the impending Indian elections, adds to the volatility of the current crisis. While one can call the belligerents’ actions across the Line of Control (LoC) as kinetic, they are on the precipice of an all-out war.

It is, therefore, difficult to see PM Modi climbing down from the escalation ladder, without extracting any perceptible gains against Pakistan. The political – not military – logic suggests that India would escalate till there are diminishing returns from such a proposition.

While India lacks a clear military, technological or economic supremacy over Pakistan, it has managed to leverage its diplomatic advantage rather well.

Other than the Organisation of Islamic Countries (OIC), the world at large has sided with India and endorsed or accepted its action against the JeM camps in Pakistan as a counter-terrorism measure. Even the OIC is hosting the Indian external affairs minister Sushma Swaraj, as a guest of honor this week.

While the Pakistani PM Imran Khan, buoyed by the downed IAF planes and captured pilot, appeared to be delivering a calm and calculated message of dialogue, the diplomatic milieu informs us that India still has significant wiggle room left to have the last military word.

Also Read: Donald Trump Promises ‘Reasonably Attractive’ News on Indo-Pak Escalation

Whether PM Modi chooses another strike or even a broader conflict would largely be dictated by his domestic political objectives rather than a desire to actually redefine and reinforce the red lines.

Contrary to popular belief, the nuclear threshold need not be approached, let alone crossed, in a conventional military standoff. While Pakistan loves to brandish the nukes, the cold, hard reality is that they deter a nuclear Armageddon but not a conventional war. The possibilities for conventional escalation are endless and range from broadening of the conflict across the LoC, the working boundary south of it, or the international border further down south.

Pakistan’s playbook on Kashmir

The path that India chooses remains to be seen, but the Pakistani playbook on Kashmir has clearly not changed in 70 years. The fundamentals of Pakistan’s Kashmir strategy have been: “defreeze” the Kashmir issue; foment an ostensibly indigenous insurgency in the Valley; and “internationalise” the conflict.

From fielding a tribal militia in Kashmir in 1947-48, to deploying irregular infiltrators in the 1965 Operation Gibraltar, to a massive jihadist incursion in Kargil, to the Pulwama attack, Pakistan has used proxies to prosecute its foreign policy goals. While it has failed to fuel its objectives, it has precipitated tremendous regional instability and a massive jihadist blowback inside Pakistan.

Absent a concerted and sustained regional and international response, Pakistan is unlikely to correct course. A US expert on South Asia, Stephen Cohen, once quipped that Pakistan negotiates with the world while holding a gun to its own head. I have maintained that it is much worse: Pakistan comes to a negotiating table wearing a nuclear-armed suicide vest.

While any sane person would wish to avert any and all wars, once and forever, at times it is imperative to call a nuclear bluff. President John F. Kennedy did that and prevailed against the erstwhile USSR in the Bay of Pigs nuclear standoff.

Security agencies inspect the site of the Pulwama suicide bomb attack. Credit: PTI

The onus for making peace

The onus for making peace should not be on law-abiding states but on the rogue armies and puppet regimes that flout those laws. In the current instance, the responsibility for initiating and escalating hostilities rests squarely with the Pakistani army, which has harbored jihadi terrorists of all shades for decades.

The calls for peace must start with asking the Pakistani generals to jettison their perennial policy of deploying jihadis as force-multipliers or more accurately as the expendables. In the aftermath of the Pulwama attack, the Pakistani DG ISPR has proclaimed a couple of times that Pakistan and India are democracies and democracies don’t go to war with each other.

What is imminently lost on the Pakistani army’s spokesman is that the sine qua non of democracy is civilian control of the government, as well as foreign and domestic policies, and the armed forces – none of which has happened in Pakistan even when the country has had democracy in name.

Also Read: Could Sharing Live IAF Flight Locations Online Compromise Pilots’ Security?

The Pakistani army justifies its existence and the massive budget allocations to it by perpetuating conflicts beyond the country’s borders. And in doing so, it severely weakens the Kashmiri cause. The first casualty of the current hostilities was the plight of the Kashmiris. While the Indian excesses in Kashmir draw sporadic attention, concern and condemnation, the JeM-type terror undermines and delegitimises the genuine grievances of the Kashmiri people.

As a firm a believer in the twin rights of self-determination and secession, I’m of the view that people in nation-states and multi-ethnic, multi-religious states are even more entitled to exercise those rights, be it in Kashmir or in Balochistan. Only Kashmiris have the right to decide what they want to do with their beloved Kashmir and their destiny.

As a prominent Kashmiri, PM Jawaharlal Nehru, told the Indian Constituent Assembly on November 25, 1947: “[T]he issue in Kashmir is whether violence and naked force should decide the future or the will of people?”

The short answer to Nehru’s emphatic question is that the will of the people should decide the future of the people – everywhere and always. It should never be decided by the barrel of a soldier’s gun or the suicide vest of a jihadist terrorist.

Mohammad Taqi is a Pakistani-American columnist; he tweets @mazdaki.

Israel’s Beresheet Moon Lander Hits Glitch as Computer Resets Itself

Beresheet is scheduled to be the first non-government lunar landing.

New Delhi: Israel’s Beresheet lunar lander, launched from Florida on February 21, won’t be reaching the moon as soon as planned. During an engine firing that was meant to get it closer to the Moon, the computer unexpectedly reset itself, and the manoeuvre was aborted.

Beresheet is scheduled to be the first non-government lunar landing. The 585-kg spacecraft was built by Israeli nonprofit space venture SpaceIL and state-owned defence contractor Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), with $100 million furnished almost entirely by private donors.

“During the pre-manoeuvre phase the spacecraft computer reset unexpectedly, causing the manoeuvre to be automatically cancelled,” SpaceIL said in a statement. “The engineering teams of SpaceIL and IAI are examining the data and analyzing the situation. At this time, the spacecraft’s systems are working well, except for the known problem in the star tracker.”

SpaceIL has said that so far Beresheet remains in communication with its control centre, and is ready to try another orbit-boosting burn, CNET reported.

Also read: Long Ago, the Number of Meteors Hitting Earth Spiked Suddenly – and Didn’t Stop

Star trackers, according to Spaceflight Now, are used by spacecraft to navigate with respect to target stars. Extreme Tech reported that Beresheet‘s star tracker problem was due to being blinded by the sun. The launch revealed “high sensitivity to blinding by the sun’s rays in the star trackers,” the website quoted another SpaceIL statement as saying.

Beresheet, about the size of a dish-washing machine, was one of three sets of cargo carried aloft by the Falcon 9 on February 21, part of the private rocket fleet of Elon Musk’s SpaceX. It was scheduled to enter the lunar orbit on April 4 and spiral down to a lower altitude in preparation for landing on April 11, Spaceflight Now reported.

Israeli news agency Haaretz too reported that a technical snag had derailed the spacecraft’s schedule. This just a day after the agency published an article calling Beresheet a “giant leap for Israeli chutzpah”.

According to Haaretz, the Beresheet project ran into a number of difficulties before the launch. It was competing for the Google Lunar XPRIZE challenge, which was aiming to take the first commercial lander to the moon. However, the prize was wrapped up without a winner being announced, Forbes reported. There was a time when it looked like the Beresheet project would fall through completely, but monetary interventions from private donations kept it going.

Given its financial troubles, Beresheet is taking a long and circuitous route to the moon, according to Spaceflight Now. This will help save money and fuel. According to a website, “The mission would have needed a dedicated rocket to make a direct trip to the moon, an expense the SpaceIL team could not afford.”

While it is not impossible and other spacecraft have taken the longer route to the moon before, Spaceflight Now says that this will mean “that the probe spends more time traveling through the radiation belts, donut-shaped rings of charged particles surrounding Earth that could pose a hazard to spacecraft electronics”.

(With Reuters inputs)

Brexit: May Gains Two Weeks’ Brexit Reprieve From British Lawmakers

After months of saying that Britain must leave the EU on March 29, May opened up the possibility of a short limited extension to the exit date.

London: Prime Minister Theresa May won a two-week reprieve on Wednesday from British lawmakers, who postponed a threatened rebellion aimed at blocking a no-deal Brexit after she agreed to a possible delay to Britain’s departure from the EU.

But the opposition Labour Party announced it would now support a new public vote on Brexit, the first time since Britain voted in 2016 to leave the EU that one of its main parties has backed giving voters a chance to change their minds.

After months of saying that Britain must leave the EU on time on March 29, May opened up the possibility on Tuesday of a short limited extension to the exit date.

That was enough to avert a showdown in parliament on Wednesday with lawmakers – including ministers in her own government who had said they were prepared to join a rebellion this week to avert an exit with no agreement.

Also Read: India, the EU and the Hard Realities of a Post-Brexit World

May’s climbdown took much of the heat out of a series of votes on Wednesday that could have ripped control of the entire process away from the government.

In the end, lawmakers backed her promised timetable. But it now means British citizens and businesses will not learn how, or possibly even whether, they are to leave the European Union until the final weeks or even days before the deadline.

After a deal she negotiated with European leaders was rejected on January 15 in the biggest parliamentary defeat in modern British history, May is hoping to bring back a tweaked divorce accord for a vote, which could come as early as next week but may not take place until March 12.

May has now promised that if her deal is voted down, lawmakers will get a chance to vote on whether to leave with no deal, or to ask the European Union to delay the deadline.

Lawmakers voted 502-20 in support of an amendment proposed by opposition Labour lawmaker Yvette Cooper that spelled out May’s proposed timetable. The government backed the amendment.

Before May’s concessions on Tuesday, Cooper had been assembling support from all parties for an amendment that would have ensured parliament had a chance to block a no-deal exit and seek a delay.

Wednesday’s votes also saw lawmakers defeat a Labour proposal for a permanent customs union with the EU.

While that was widely expected, Labour had said this week that its failure would be the trigger for the main opposition party to pledge its support for a new referendum.

“Disappointed the government has rejected Labour’s alternative Brexit deal,” Labour’s Brexit spokesman, Keir Starmer, said. “That’s why Labour will put forward or support an amendment in favour of a public vote to prevent a damaging Tory Brexit.”

Lawmakers also rejected a proposal on Wednesday by the Scottish National Party calling for no-deal Brexit to be ruled out under any circumstances. Most lawmakers oppose a no-deal exit, but May’s promise to allow a vote on that after the vote on her deal was enough to persuade many not to intervene yet.

Another measure, calling on the government to guarantee the rights of EU citizens in the event of a no-deal exit, was also passed with government support.

The labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn. Credit: Reuters

Macron says delay not automatic

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Wednesday that the EU would agree to extend the Brexit deadline beyond March 29 only if Britain justified such a request with a clear objective.

“If the British need more time, we would support an extension request if it was justified by new choices from the British,” Macron told a joint briefing with Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel in Paris. “But we would in no way accept an extension without a clear view on the objective pursued.”

French officials have said Paris would agree to delay Brexit only if that came with a credible solution, for example if Britain called an election, held a second referendum, or presented a new plan that was acceptable to all sides but needed more time to be finalised.

Merkel said she was “totally on the same line” as Macron but appeared more willing to show flexibility.

“If Britain needs some more time, we won’t refuse but we are striving for an orderly solution i.e. an orderly exit of Britain from the European Union,” she said.

The big shifts on Brexit by both May and Labour this week reflect turmoil within both major parties as the Brexit deadline approaches. Eight Labour lawmakers and three Conservatives quit their parties last week to set up a new anti-Brexit group, the biggest such schism in British politics for decades. Lawmakers in both parties have threatened further defections.

(Reuters)

All You Need to Know About Ex Trump Lawyer Cohen’s Testimony

Michael Cohen has cast Trump as a racist and con man and said the president knew about efforts to damage Hillary Clinton’s campaign.

Donald Trump is a “racist” and a “con man,” his former lawyer Michael Cohen told the US House of Representatives Committee on Oversight and Reform at the outset of a damning public testimony based on his decade-long professional relationship with the US president.

Cohen, who once boasted he would “take a bullet” for Trump, accused the president of potential campaign finance violations and prior knowledge of efforts to derail the presidential campaign of Hillary Clinton. He also revealed internal details about the Trump Organization.

Hush payments to Stormy Daniels

Trump directed and coordinated payments to adult film actress Stephanie Clifford, alias Stormy Daniels, according to Cohen. The money was initially paid by Cohen from his personal funds to prevent Clifford from going public with a story of a brief 2006 affair with Trump, he said.

“He asked me to pay off an adult film star with whom he had an affair, and to lie to his wife about it, which I did,” Cohen said.

As evidence, Cohen provided lawmakers with the copy of a personal check for $35,000 (€30,800) signed by Trump and dated after the president took office. The payment, according to Cohen, was one of several installments to reimburse him for the $130,000 that he had paid to Clifford’s lawyer. Trump also allegedly discussed the payments with Cohen in the Oval Office.

Cohen had previously admitted paying the one-time Playboy model Karen McDougal over a similar issue. Trump has repeatedly denied ordering hush-money payments to the women, which could violate US campaign finance laws.

Cohen admitted to paying off adult-film star Stormy Daniels at Trump’s instructions. Credit: Reuters

WikiLeaks, hacked Democrat emails

Commenting on emails obtained from the hack of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and published by WikiLeaks during the 2016 presidential campaign, Cohen said Trump had had previous knowledge of the release.

According to Cohen, Trump learned of the dump from his longtime ally and campaign adviser, Roger Stone.

Also Read: Trump Selling Nuclear Technology to Saudi Arabia Is a New Moral Low

“Mr. Stone told Mr. Trump that he had just gotten off the phone with [WikiLeaks founder] Julian Assange and that Mr. Assange told Mr. Stone that, within a couple of days, there would be a massive dump of emails that would damage Hillary Clinton’s campaign. Mr. Trump responded by stating to the effect of ‘wouldn’t that be great,'” Cohen said.

Stone was arrested in January on charges of making false statements, witness tampering and obstructing justice in the Russia probe. He has denied talking to Trump about the WikiLeaks hack.

Trump has stated he had “never heard” of WikiLeaks before the DNC hack and dump of emails from his rival Clinton.

Russia and Trump’s interests in Moscow

Cohen previously pleaded guilty for lying to Congress about Trump’s alleged plans to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. Trump had claimed he had no business interests in Russia in the run up to the 2016 election.

However, Cohen said Trump “knew of and directed” negotiations to build a property in Moscow during the campaign. The plans never materialised.

Cohen said he didn’t have “direct evidence” that Trump or his aides colluded with Russia to get him elected, but disputed the president’s account of a meeting between the president’s son, Donald Trump Jr., and a Kremlin-linked lawyer in an attempt to dig up “dirt” on Clinton.

While the Trump family alleges the younger Trump acted independently of his father and without informing him, Cohen said the younger Trump “would never set up any meeting of any significance alone — and certainly not without checking with his father.”

He also said Trump “frequently told me and others that his son Don Jr. had the worst judgment of anyone in the world.”

Cohen said he didn’t have “direct evidence” that Trump or his aides colluded with Russia to get him elected.

Trump’s character

Cohen described Trump as “cheat” who treated his presidential run as “the greatest infomercial in political history,” saying the businessman never believed he would win the Republican nomination or subsequent election.

He also called the president “a racist,” and said he heard Trump say black people would not vote for him because they were “too stupid.”

Under questioning, Cohen admitted to paying a tech company to manipulate two online polls, one at the website of the American broadcaster CNBC and the other at the Drudge Report in 2015. This was allegedly done at Trump’s direction.

Also Read: Donald Trump Promises ‘Reasonably Attractive’ News on Indo-Pak Escalation

Cohen also said he was instructed by Trump to threaten the high school and colleges attended by the president to prevent them from releasing his grades or SAT score, a standardised college admission test.

Cohen also claimed Trump directed him to make about 500 threats to various individuals and organisations over the course of ten years of working for him. The threats involved possible litigation or “an argument with a nasty reporter that is writing an article.”

More revelations to come

Several times in his hours-long testimony, Cohen refused to give details on his dealings with the president, including his last conversation with Trump or a Trump representative. The reason, according to Cohen, is that the matter is still being investigated by a New York court and that he was told not to discuss them.

Cohen also said he knows about other illegal acts by Trump, which are still under investigation.

He wrapped up his explosive testimony by warning that Trump may not accept a “peaceful transition of power” if he loses his bid for re-election in 2020, saying the president would do anything to win.

“Given my experience working for Mr. Trump, I fear that if he loses the election in 2020, that there will never be a peaceful transition of power,” he said in a final statement.

This article was first published on Deutsche Welle.

Indian TV Media’s Blatant Endorsement of Hyper-Nationalism Is Shameful

When the history of these times is finally written, the media’s reprehensible role in creating a climate of hate will merit a special mention.

‘Pakistan’s Propaganda Busted’, was the screaming headline on top of the TV screen as the anchor interviewed a retired Air Chief Marshall who analysed the downing of an IAF aircraft by Pakistani forces.

In the irony-deficient zone that is the Indian media, I doubt if either the anchor or the news team realised their words were a mockery given the tone and tenour of their own coverage that is little more than the government’s version. But even if they did, would that stop them? Hardly, because they think they are fulfiling their national duty, principles of journalism be damned. The rise in TRPs isn’t a bad bonus either.

“..being a nationalist is a prerequisite to being a journalist,” said Arnab Goswami, the patron saint of modern Indian news television, and his clones and devotees have faithfully followed the dictum. We see nightly displays of such nationalist posturing, which include gung-ho discussions led by earnest young men and women.

On Aaj Tak, on a set with the backdrop of India Gate, five men – no women panelists have been visible in recent days – stood, each one offering solutions for “bringing Pakistan to its knees” and “removing the cancer once and for all.” In the foreground, an audience member waved a huge Indian flag.

Where are the “desh drohis”, screamed another anchor, pointing a metaphorical finger at the usual ‘anti-national’ suspects – students, liberals, peaceniks. On one Telugu channel, the anchor dressed up in military fatigues and held a toy gun. “You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war,” said William Randolph Hearst to his reporter who said that all was quiet in Cuba and there was no war there. Indian television channels have twisted it and want to furnish the war. Media priapism, a doctor friend suggested, is a state that heightens the sense of phoney masculinity.

Off the channels was no better. On social media, many senior journalists, who could have been expected to provide some sobriety, went all out, congratulating the Indian Air Force for the airstrikes inside Pakistani territory. It’s a personal view one cannot quarrel with, but this blatant endorsement of hyper-nationalism provides a certain level of legitimacy to jingoistic elements.

The bread and butter practices of journalism call for fact checking, asking the government for some evidence and a certain level of detachment and distance rather than joining in the frenzy and burnishing one’s own patriotic credentials. It may be the ‘mood of the nation’ – a dubious concept to begin with – but even if it is, should it matter to a journalist?

I used to think that the nightly screaming about the nation, patriotism and Pakistan and the constant hate-mongering against ‘desh drohis’ was done with an eye on the numbers. In a difficult environment, where channels found it difficult to make money, every trick in the book was legitimate. The audiences wanted it and the channels gave it to them, ensuring viewer stickiness – it made business sense.

Also read: Editorial: India and Pakistan Should De-Escalate Now

Now I am not so sure. The aggressive campaign against perceived ‘enemies of the nation’ aligns too closely with the agenda of this government and the larger Sangh parivar. The television channels – at least some of them – appear to be in a coordinated effort to build up a particular mood and narrative, one which suits the government.

They are not merely mouth-pieces or supporters of Narendra Modi and his administration – they are the force multipliers, the bellicose media wing, in place to not just propagate but also to drown out other voices. The belligerence is not a pose – it is the main weapon in this armoury, trained on the ‘enemy’ which has to be crushed.

The build-up of nationalist hysteria is not merely a cynical business-oriented tactic but is in tandem with a wider strategy in which not just the television channels, but the social media, the troll battalions and the fake news factories are involved. Videos of patriotic songs were shared. WhatsApp reverberated with slogans and tales of militaristic bravery. At a political rally in Rajasthan, Narendra Modi declared, “saugandh mujhe is mitti ki, mein desh nahin jhukne doonga”.

Sections of the film industry too are willing accomplices. Note the sudden upsurge of patriotic films just in time for the elections. It is no coincidence that films glorifying the military – and even Modi himself – have been released in the last few months. Phrases like “How’s the Josh” have neatly slipped into everyday vocabulary and have been used by ministers, who have openly praised the films like Manikarnika and Uri.

A wonderfully evocative German word, Gleischaltung, which loosely means co-ordination in English, fits in here. It described the well-crafted Nazification of Germany after Hitler became chancellor in 1933. Within months, laws were passed making Germany a one-party state. Opponents and rivals were jailed or killed and the other parties were banned. Trade unions were fused under one banner and soon, almost all instruments of state and society passed in the hands of the Nazis.

Key to this effort was propaganda. Under Joseph Goebbels, the ‘Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda’ took control of all forms of media, from newspapers and magazines, theatre and music, art and even the new media – that is, radio and film. Those who resisted had to flee or face imprisonment or worse. All of these media were pressed into the service of not just the nation or the party but Hitler himself – since even civil servants and soldiers had to take the ‘Hitler oath’ of loyalty to the nation and the Fuhrer himself. Membership of the Nazi party increased dramatically.

We may not have reached that level of official coordination yet. There is no propaganda ministry, nor a law forcing anyone to declare allegiance to the prime minister. But where is the need? Even what is being done without an officially mandated order is coordination that is most impressive.

Also read: Today, Freedom From Fear Is Freedom From Mainstream Media

Private citizens are free to publicly proclaim their views. A supporter of peace with Pakistan may find the jingoism of another offensive and vice versa. The extreme positions being taken on social media or WhatsApp groups may border on the obscene. But that is what free speech is about.

The media does not have that luxury. Journalists have a professional commitment to be objective and balanced, to report the facts and to ask questions of authorities. They are not part of the government or its propaganda arm. Journalists may hold personal views, but have to keep them aside while reporting – that is no reflection of their patriotism, but part of the professional contract with their readers.

Indian television media stopped any pretence of professionalism a long time ago and are proud to be part of the national (read government) effort. They want to wear their nationalism on their sleeve. They are happy to align with the objectives and agenda of the ruling party. It would be naïve to expect them to change.

But this time they have gone too far. The stakes are high and the potential for things escalating and getting out of hand is real. Constant Pakistan bashing in other times is one thing and mildly diverting during ‘normal’ times, but these are not normal times. A government led by people with a visceral dislike for Pakistan and under pressure to show its tough side could take us towards a very dangerous situation.

The chorus by the media could convert into public opinion which the government could take as a sign of endorsement. Some may even consider the electoral advantages of such a step. The situation could go out of control.

Yet, large and influential sections of the media have shown no sense of responsibility; their record in fanning the worst kind of xenophobia is shameful. It will have serious long-term repercussions to the country’s secular fabric. When the history of these times is finally written, the media’s reprehensible role in creating a climate of hate will merit a special mention.

Behind Enemy Lines: How Abhinandan Varthaman Survived After the Crash

By not divulging any information beyond what a POW is supposed to reveal, the wing commander conducted himself professionally and lawfully. But the same cannot be said for his captors, who made him an object of public curiosity, in violation of the Geneva Conventions.

New Delhi: On Wednesday, February 27, India officially acknowledged that an IAF pilot, Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, had gone “missing in action” after an aerial skirmish between Indian and Pakistani fighter jets.

On Thursday, just after 4:30 pm, Pakistan’s prime minister announced that Abhinandan would be released on Friday, as a “peace gesture.”

As conflicting reports on his capture circulated in both nations’ media, Karachi’s Dawn newspaper published a detailed eye-witness’ account of how the Indian pilot was captured after his crash across the Line of Control.

This report, combined with videos of the pilot interacting with Pakistani officials off-camera, show how the wing commander maintained a level head and admirable composure throughout this ordeal.

Local civilians first on the scene

At around 8:45 am on Wednesday morning, Indian and Pakistani fighter jets were reportedly engaged in a dogfight in the skies above Horra’n village, located about 7 km from the LoC in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir’s Bhimber district.

Both Indian planes then reportedly caught fire, but while one sped back into Indian territory, the other burst into flames and plummeted to the ground. Local resident Mohammad Razzaq told Dawn that he then saw a pilot emerge “safe and sound” from his parachute.

Razzaq then reportedly told the village’s children to stay away from the plane’s wreckage until military personnel arrived on the scene.

Also read: Could Sharing Live IAF Flight Locations Online Compromise Pilots’ Security?

Once safely on the ground, the pilot asked the youths whether he was in India or Pakistan, to which one of them responded, “India”.

If this showed quick thinking by the locals – who obviously wanted to mislead the Indian pilot into believing he was home and safe – Abhinandan appears to have been sceptical. Dawn reports that the pilot “shouted some slogans” – presumably ‘Hindustan Zindabad’ – and told the youths that his “back was broken” and that he needed water.

Supposedly provoked by his slogan, a local from the group shouted “Pakistan zindabad”, immediately alerting Abhinandan to the fact that he was on the wrong side of the border. As he sought to move away from the group which had surrounded him, some of them picked up stones and began moving aggressively towards him. Abhinandantook out his service revolver to fire a warning shot in the air. He ran backwards for nearly half a kilometre, firing more shots in the air, while the group of locals pursued him.

Pilot sought to destroy maps, papers

Backed into a corner, the wing commander jumped into a small pond and hurriedly tried to destroy some documents and maps he was carrying, by soaking them in water and trying to swallow them.

As the group caught up with the pilot and told him to drop his weapon, one of the boys shot at his leg as he stood in the pond. Finally, Abhinandan came out of the pond and told them not to kill him.

This was clearly a dangerous situation for the pilot and firing his gun in the air, given the circumstances, was a calibrated an act of self-defence. His later conduct – he thanked Pakistani military personnel for rescuing him from the “mob” – supports the idea that he was trying to save himself in as measured a manner as possible. Commenting on the group that found the pilot, eye witness Razzaq even thanked god that “none of the boys shot him dead,” Dawn reports.

The pilot’s decision to destroy sensitive documents was also standard protocol to prevent strategic information from falling into the adversary’s hands.

According to Additional Protocol I, 1977, of the Geneva Conventions, attacking a parachutist from a distressed aircraft constitutes a war crime. Article 42 of Protocol I expressly deals with this specific situation, noting:

  1. That no person parachuting from a distressed aircraft shall be made the object of attack during his descent;
  2. That upon reaching the ground in territory controlled by an adverse party, a person who has parachuted from an aircraft in distress shall be given an opportunity to surrender before being made the object of attack, unless it is apparent that he is engaging in a hostile act.

According to Geneva Convention III, 1949, “all effects and articles of personal use, except arms, horses, military equipment and military documents, shall remain in the possession of prisoners of war.”

While Article 42 does not explicitly mention non-combatants, the basic rules of the Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols in the role of civilian and neutral parties, provides that the civilian population must respect the wounded, even if they belong to the adverse party, and shall not commit any act of violence against them.

Moreover, in cases not covered by the Conventions or additional Protocols, civilians and combatants “remain under the protection and authority of the principles of international law derived from established custom and from the principles of humanity.”

Also read: #Abhinandan, a Human Face to the Costs of War, Empowers Voices for Peace Online

Conduct under detention

The group of boys only stopped beating up the pilot when Pakistani personnel showed up and took him into custody. A video of that scene, presumably shot by locals, soon made its way to social media.

After being “captured”, the Pakistani government’s media wing released a video of Wing Commander Abhinandan stating “on record, even if he goes back to [India],” that the officers of the Pakistani army looked after him “very well.” He went on to thank the captain who rescued him, and said he was “very impressed” with the Pakistani army.

Referring to the interviewer (off camera) as “major,” Abhinandan responded to a question about where he is from with a polite, “[Sorry], am I supposed to tell you this, Major?”

The “major” persisted, asking what aircraft he was flying and what his mission was, to which Abhinandan responded, “Sorry, major, I am not supposed to tell you this, but I’m sure you found the wreckage.”

Under Article 17 of the GCIII, “every prisoner of war, when questioned on the subject, is bound to give only his surname, first names and rank, date of birth, and army, regimental, personal or serial number, or failing this, equivalent information.”

By circulating the videos it made on social media, Pakistan’s military may have been in violation of Article 13 of Geneva Convention III, which affords prisoners protection from “public curiosity.”

The videos show that the pilot maintained professional conduct, followed protocol and prioritised India’s national security interests.

His treatment and release

On Thursday, Pakistan army’s director general, Inter-Services Public Relations, General major Asif Ghafoor tweeted: “There is only one pilot under Pakistan Army’s custody. Wing Comd Abhi Nandan is being treated as per norms of military ethics,” along with a video that purportedly showed the pilot in safe surroundings, drinking tea and politely refusing to divulge information.

Pakistan’s custody of Varthaman is governed by the Geneva Conventions of 1949, which lay out rules for how to treat prisoners of war. POWs are protected from prosecution for directly taking part in hostilities. Their detention does not amount to a form of punishment, but strictly aims to prevent further participation in hostilities.

It was presumably in accordance with these provisions that Pakistan announced its decision to release the Indian pilot.

Pakistan to Release IAF Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman Today

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan called the pilot’s release a “peace gesture”. 

New Delhi: Wing Commander Abhinandan Vardhaman, the Indian Air Force pilot who is in Pakistani custody after an air skirmish on the border on Wednesday, will be released on Friday.

The announcement was made by Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan on Thursday, a little after 4:30 pm. He called the pilot’s release a “peace gesture”.

Khan said in parliament that India was trying to launch missile strikes on Wednesday night, but they were defused. Sources in Delhi told The Wire that they were aware that Pakistan had told foreign embassies on Wednesday night that India was going to launch missile strikes. According to the sources, Pakistan was also spreading rumours that the Indian Navy was ready invade Karachi.

Indian government sources strenuously denied these claims, calling them “manufactured news” by Pakistan to create a “war psychosis”.

India has not yet responded to Khan’s claim that he tried to call Prime Minister Narendra Modi last night. But earlier in the day, Pakistan’s foreign minister had also sad that Khan was ready to speak with Modi. When asked about this offer for a phone call, Indian sources had said that Pakistan had to prepare the right atmosphere.

On Thursday evening, Air Vice-Marshal R.G.K. Kapoor said the Indian Air Force is happy that Wing Commander Abhinanda is being returned to India. He said that his release is in consonance with the Geneva Conventions.

In a press briefing on Wednesday afternoon, India officially confirmed that one Indian pilot was “missing in action” after an aerial skirmish with Pakistani fighter jets.

India had called for the “immediate and safe return” of the Indian pilot, identified as Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman, and termed the circulation of videos showing his “capture” by Pakistan as a violation of international law and in contravention of the Geneva Conventions.

Also read: Could Sharing Live IAF Flight Locations Online Compromise Pilots’ Security?

Even before India confirmed that a pilot was missing, Pakistani media had been circulating a video of the pilot in which he identified himself as Wing Commander Abhinandan. “I am an IAF officer. My service number is 27981,” he said in the video.

After India confirmed that the pilot was “missing in action”, Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan called for “better sense [to] prevail” and renewed his offer for dialogue with India. Indian officials did not mention the pilot’s name.

The pilot’s capture and calls for peace

The pilot’s capture led to calls for peace from both sides of the border. Videos purportedly of Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman – being pulled from an angry mob by Pakistan Army soldiers, then upright and blindfolded in captivity, then drinking tea – put the first human face on the costs of a possible war. On Twitter, around 2 pm on Wednesday, #SayNoToWar began to trend in both India and Pakistan.

One video showed the pilot being punched on a river bed, even as a voice-over shouted, “enough.” There were also images of him being led away with blood streaming down his face.

Another video was circulated of him sipping tea, as he fielded questions. The pilot, who had a black eye, said that he was “impressed” by his treatment by the Pakistan army and specifically mentioned a Pakistani captain who rescued him from the locals who were trying to accost him.

Dawn reported that once pilot landed in Pakistan with his parachute, his first encounter was with some Pakistani villagers. The pilot asked the youth around him whether he was in India or Pakistan, to which one of them responded “India”. The pilot then shouted some slogans and told the youth that his “back was broken” and that he needed water.

Someone from the group then reportedly shouted “Pakistan zindabad,” prompting Abhinandan to fire a warning shot into the air as the group picked up stones and started moving towards him. The pilot ran backwards for nearly half a kilometre, firing more warning shots in the air, while they chased him.

Backed into a corner, the Wing Commander jumped into a small pond and hurriedly tried to destroy some documents and maps he was carrying – he tried to swallow some and soak others in the water.

As the group caught up with the pilot and told him to drop his weapon, one of the boys shot at his leg as he stood in the pond. Finally, the Wing Commander came out of the pond and told them not to kill him, according to Dawn.

The pilot later thanked Pakistani military personnel for rescuing him from the “mob”.