
India accused Pakistan of having attacked three of its military bases with drones and missiles, an assertion which was refused by Islamabad.
The Indian army said that it had thwarted Pakistan’s attempts to attack its bases to Jammu and Udhampur, the cashmere administered by the Indians, and Pathankot, in the state of Punjab in India.
Explosions were reported on Thursday evening in the city of Jammu in the cashmere administered by the Indians while the region entered a power failure.
The Minister of Pakistan Defense told the BBC that they were not behind the attack.
“We deny it, we have not gone up so far,” Khawaja Asif said to the BBC, adding: “We will not hit and then deny”.

Earlier Thursday, India said that it had struck the air defenses in Pakistan and “neutralized” from Islamabad to achieve military objectives in India on Wednesday evening.
Pakistan called on this action another “act of aggression”, following Indian missile strikes on Wednesday on targets in Pakistan and cashmere administered by Pakistan.
On Wednesday, the strikes of India sparked a choir of calls for de -escalation of the international community with the United Nations and the world leaders calling for calm.
Bombing attacks and incidents along the border attracted fears of a broader conflict that bursts between nuclear weapons.
It is considered the worst confrontation between the two countries in more than two decades.
India said that it had struck nine sites on Wednesday “terrorist infrastructure” in retaliation for a militant attack on tourists to the cashmere administered by the Indians last month.
Pakistan firmly denied the Indian claims that it supported activists who killed 26 civilians in the mountainous town of Pahalgam.
It was the bloodiest attack on civilians in the region for years, sending tensions. Most of the victims were Indian tourists.
The cashmere administered by the Indians has experienced an insurrection of several decades against the Indian regime which has won thousands of lives.
The cashmere has been a flash point between countries since they became independent after British India was separated in 1947. The two claimed the cashmere and fought two wars.

On Wednesday, there were calls for restraint from around the world after India launched “the Sindoor operation”.
But on Thursday, the two parties accused each other of a new military action.
Pakistan military spokesperson said drones sent by India have engaged in several places.
“Last night, India showed another act of aggression by sending drones to several locations,” said Lieutenant-General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry. “These locations are Lahore, Gujranwala, Chakwal, Rawalpindi, Attock, Bahawalpur, Miano, Chor and near Karachi.”
He said that a civilian was killed in the Sindh province and four soldiers injured in Lahore.
The American consulate of Lahore told its staff to rise in the building.
India said its latest measures had been taken in response to Pakistan attempts “to initiate a number of military objectives in the north and west of India” overnight.
“He was reliably learned that an air defense system in Lahore was neutralized,” a statement from the Ministry of Defense said. Pakistan denied the complaint.
There was no independent confirmation of the versions of the events of the two countries.
Later in the day, the Secretary of Foreign Affairs of India, Vikram Misri, told a press conference in Delhi: “Our intention was not to degenerate questions, we only answer the original climbing.”
Meanwhile, the number of victims continues to increase. Pakistan says that 31 people were killed and 57 injured by Indian air strikes in Pakistan and cashmere administered by Pakistan, and pulling the control line since Wednesday morning.
The army of India said that the number of people killed by Pakistani shot in the contested region of cashmere had increased to 16, including three women and five children.
India initially appointed any group which, according to him, was at the origin of the attack in Pahalgam, but on May 7, it accused the militant group Lashkar-E-Taiba based in Pakistan.
Indian police allegedly alleged that two of the attackers were Pakistani nationals, a complaint rejected by Islamabad. He says it has nothing to do with the attacks of April 22.
On Wednesday, in an end -of -evening speech, the Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif promised to avenge those who were killed in the strikes of India.
He repeated the statement of Pakistan that she had shot down five Indian fighter planes, saying that it was a “overwhelming response”. India has not commented on this assertion.
Following the reports of Thursday’s explosions in Jammu, local media cited Indian military sources on Thursday in reports that explosions in the Jammu region were also reported in the cities of Akhoror, Samba and Kathua.