Trump says India, Pakistan will sort out tensions

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President Donald Trump speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One, as he travels to Italy for the funeral of Pope Francis, on April 25.

President Donald Trump speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One as he travelled to Italy for the funeral of Pope Francis on April 25.

PHOTO: NYTIMES

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- India and Pakistan will figure out relations between themselves, US President Donald Trump said on April 25, as tensions soared between the two neighbouring countries after an attack in India’s Kashmir region that was the worst in nearly two decades.

Mr Trump, speaking to reporters on Air Force One, cited historical conflict in

the disputed border region

and said he knew both countries’ leaders, but did not answer when asked whether he would contact them.

“They’ll get it figured out one way or the other,” he said as he travelled aboard his plane. “There’s great tension between Pakistan and India, but there always has been.”

On April 22,

26 men were killed

in a tourist site in Kashmir, shot dead in a meadow. India has said there were Pakistani elements to the attack, a claim Islamabad denies.

Both India and Pakistan have claimed the region of Kashmir, and have fought two wars over the area.

Relations between the two South Asian nations have deteriorated in the days following the attack, with India setting aside a critical water sharing pact and Pakistan closing its airspace to Indian airlines. Their trade is also at risk.

On April 25, Indian stock markets fell on fears of fresh tensions as the Indian authorities searched for militants in the region, before markets recovered some losses. REUTERS

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