Alwaght- Newly-released high-resolution satellite images show that a religious school run by Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) appears to be still standing days after India claimed its warplanes had hit the militant group’s training camp on the site and killed a large number of them.
The images produced by Planet Labs Inc, a San Francisco-based private satellite operator, show at least six buildings on the madrasa site on March 4, six days after the airstrike, Reuters news agency reported.
On February 26, India said it had conducted “preemptive” airstrikes against the site, destroying it and killing 300 militants.
According to Indian government sources, the jets dropped 1,000-kilogram bombs.
Pakistan said at the time that it had scrambled its own fighter jets when the Indian warplanes violated its airspace and chased them out. It said the Indian jets had dropped their payload in a forested area in haste, leaving no serious damage and casualties.
“There is not even a single brick in the debris,” Pakistani military spokesperson Major General Asif Ghafoor said the day after the attack. “If there was any infrastructure there, then there would be some debris.”
Senior researchers at the James Martin Center for nonproliferation studies who analyzed the satellite images said weapons that large would have caused obvious damage to the structures visible in the picture.
“If the strike had been successful, given the information we have about what kind of munitions were used, I would expect to see signs that the buildings had been damaged,” said senior research associate Jeffrey Lewis. “I just don’t see that here.”
New Delhi has so far failed to produce evidence that the camp was destroyed and that militants were killed. This has prompted opposition politicians to call on the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to provide more details.
“We want to know how many people actually died,” said Mamata Banerjee, the chief minister of West Bengal State. “Where did the bombs fall? Did they actually fall in the right place?”
Modi, however, accused the opposition of helping India’s “enemies” by demanding evidence of the attacks.
“At a time when our army is engaged in crushing terrorism, inside the country and outside, there are some people within the country who are trying to break their morale, which is cheering our enemy,” Modi said at a re-election campaign rally on Sunday.
India has long been engaged in a conflict with Pakistan over the disputed region of Jammu and Kashmir. The two have fought four wars since their partition in 1947, three of them over Kashmir.
JeM had claimed responsibility for an attack on an Indian security convoy in Pulwama, in Indian-administered Kashmir, that killed more than 40 Indian troops on February 14. That attack set off tensions between Pakistan and India, which said Islamabad had been involved. The Pakistani government denied that claim.
Pakistan launches crackdown on militants
In a related development, Pakistan’s Interior Ministry said on Tuesday that it had launched a crackdown to “speed up action against all proscribed organizations.”
It said some 44 militants had been arrested in the crackdown. Among them, the ministry said, were the close relatives of JeM leader, Masood Azhar.