Home Asia Pakistan: Explosions Heard In Lahore Day After Indian Strikes

Pakistan: Explosions Heard In Lahore Day After Indian Strikes

There was no immediate word on the reason for the blasts.
Smoke rising following explosions in Lahore on Thursday morning, May 8, 2025. Photo courtesy: x.com/FatimaDar_jk
Smoke rising following explosions in Lahore on Thursday morning, May 8, 2025. Photo courtesy: x.com/FatimaDar_jk

Multiple explosions were heard on Thursday morning in Lahore, as per Pakistan-based Geo TV, a Reuters witness and social media posts, amid heightened India-Pakistan tensions following recent Indian airstrikes.

There was no immediate word on the reason for the blasts.

Terrorist Infrastructure Hit

India hit “terrorist infrastructure” in Pakistan in the early hours of Wednesday, two weeks after it accused the Islamic nation of involvement in a terror attack in Kashmir, in which 26 people – mostly Hindu tourists – were killed.

Islamabad had denied the accusation and vowed retaliation to the missile strikes, also saying it shot down five Indian aircraft. India has termed reports of fighter jets being shot down as “misinformation”.

Multiple Casualties

Meanwhile, Pakistan said at least 31 of its civilians were killed and about 50 wounded in the strikes and in cross-border shelling that followed, while India said 13 of its civilians died and 43 were wounded.


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The cross-border exchange of fire tapered off slightly overnight, Indian officials said.

India also conducted blackout drills in regions close to its border with Pakistan, including the northern city of Amritsar which houses the Golden Temple revered by Sikhs, in anticipation of retaliation to its strikes.

In Pakistan, meanwhile, most cities restored some normalcy and children returned to school, but in the border province of Punjab, hospitals and civil defence authorities remained on high alert.

Pakistan Ready To De-Escalate

Although Pakistan’s federal government has pledged to respond to India’s strikes, Defence Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif told The New York Times on Wednesday that Pakistan was ready to de-escalate.

With India saying it would “respond” if Pakistan “responds”, global powers have urged a calming of tensions. US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he hoped the countries could “work it out”, adding he “will be there” if he can help.

The relationship between India and Pakistan has been fraught with tension since they gained independence from colonial Britain in 1947, and the countries have fought three wars, two of them over Kashmir.

The current escalation in tensions comes at a precarious time for Pakistan’s $350 billion economy, which is still recovering from an economic crisis that brought it to the brink of defaulting on external debt obligations in 2023 before it secured funding from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

(With inputs from Reuters)