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No Pakistani soldier or citizen died in the air strike on a terror camp at Balakot in Pakistan in February, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said on Thursday, 18 April.
Addressing women party workers in Ahmedabad, she said Indian military was given a "free hand" in the operation but was clearly told that no Pakistani citizen should be killed and also there be "not even a scratch" on the Pakistani Army.
Meanwhile, the MEA has reportedly clarified that Swaraj had meant to say “civilians” and not “citizens.”
The IAF had struck a Jaish-e-Mohammad terror training camp in Pakistan on 26 February, in response to the 14 February Pulwama attack in which 40 CRPF personnel were killed.
Swaraj said the air strike was carried out in self-defence.
"When we carried out the air strike, we had told the international community that we took the step only in self- defence," she said.
She said the entire international community supported India over the air strike.
On the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, Swaraj said the then Congress-led UPA government had failed to take along other countries to isolate Pakistan despite the fact that 40 persons belonging to 14 countries were also killed in the strike.
Pakistan had objected to the invitation extended to India for a meet of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) in Abu Dhabi last month, but the host county UAE snubbed Islamabad, she said.
Pakistan Army took a jibe at India on Thursday, 18 April, after External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj acknowledged that no civilian or soldier was killed in the Balakot attack, saying New Delhi should also take back its claim about the shooting down of a Pakistani F-16 fighter jet and the 2016 surgical strike.
The statement by army spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor came hours after Swaraj said that no Pakistani soldier or civilian died in the air strike on a terror camp at Balakot in Pakistan in February.
Pakistan has denied that the Indian Air Force jets attacked terrorists in Balakot.
(With inputs from PTI.)
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