We’re pausing our coverage
Thanks for following our coverage of the India-Pakistan conflict.
After another busy day of developments, we’re pausing our live updates for now. Here’s a round-up of the day’s main developments.
Drones downed – Pakistan
We began with an update from Pakistan, which said it shot down 12 drones from India earlier this morning.
The country’s military spokesperson vowed India “will continue to pay dearly for this naked aggression”.
Pakistan also reported that 31 civilians have been killed in India’s strikes on the country and Pakistan-administered territory on Wednesday – that’s risen from 26.
But India continued its firm stance on any potential retaliation from Pakistan, insisting any military attacks “will be met with a very, very firm response”.
Pakistan says Indian soldiers killed – India targets air defence
Later, Pakistan’s information minister claimed that the country’s military has killed “40-50 Indian soldiers” along the de facto border between the Indian and Pakistani-controlled areas of the disputed Kashmir region.
Moments afterwards, India’s government released a statement which reflected the escalating tensions between the two countries.
It claimed Pakistan attempted to engage a number of military targets in the north and west of the country overnight.
India also said its armed forces targeted air defence systems and radars across a range of locations in Pakistan, adding that a system in Lahore had been “neutralised”.
India points to ‘original escalation’
India’s foreign secretary also held a news conference and described the gun attack by “terrorists” in Indian-controlled Kashmir last month as the “original escalation”.
Vikram Misri went on to accuse Pakistan of spreading misinformation about India’s strikes on Wednesday, and said the country was giving state funerals to “terrorists”.
Your questions answered
A reminder – our defence and security analyst Michael Clarke answered your questions on the conflict between India and Pakistan with our lead world news presenter Yalda Hakim.
You can watch the full Q&A in the video below.
How India, Pakistan and UK militaries compare
By Saywah Mahmood, data journalist
India’s overall military capability significantly exceeds that of Pakistan.
It ranks fourth in the world compared to Pakistan’s 12th place, according to Global Firepower’s index, which considers a range of factors to assess military strength – for reference, the UK ranks sixth on that list.
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In terms of personnel, India has 1,237,000 active personnel in its army, 75,000 in the navy and a 149,900-strong air force.
Pakistan has fewer than half that, with 560,000 active personnel in the army, 30,000 in the navy and 70,000 in the air force.
To put this in perspective, data published at the start of the year showed the UK Armed Forces have 180,780 active personnel, with 37,601 in the navy and 108,413 in the air force.