
Saeed Shah
South Asia Correspondent at The Wall Street Journal
Journalist based in South Asia. Former Londoner. RTs are not an endorsement, all opinions my own.
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
marketscreener.com | Saeed Shah |Ariba Shahid |Sakshi Dayal
ISLAMABAD, NEW DELHI (Reuters) -Pakistan will not get water from rivers over which India has rights, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Thursday, upping the rhetoric in a standoff over water access triggered by a deadly attack in Indian Kashmir. Pakistan's chief legal officer, in an interview with Reuters, responded that Islamabad remained willing to discuss water sharing between the neighbours but said India must stick to a decades-old treaty.
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3 weeks ago |
japantimes.co.jp | Saeed Shah |Asif Shahzad |Shivam Patel |Gibran Peshimam
At 2.09 a.m. on Saturday, Ahmad Subhan, who lives near an air base in the Pakistan military garrison city of Rawalpindi, heard the first explosion that rattled the windows of his house — and took South Asia to the brink of war. As dawn broke, the heaviest fighting in decades between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan reached a crescendo, after nearly three weeks of escalating tensions. Fighter jets and missiles crisscrossed the skies of one of the world's most populated regions.
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3 weeks ago |
politiko.com.ph | Saeed Shah |Asif Shahzad |Shivam Patel |Gibran Peshimam
SOURCE: Reuters U.S. played key role in brokering ceasefire, just days after Vance downplayed need to act Indian strike on Pakistani air base near nuclear-planning body caused alarm Rubio pushed both Islamabad and Delhi to de-escalate By Saeed Shah, Asif Shahzad, Shivam Patel, Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI, May 13 (Reuters) – At 2.09 am on Saturday, Ahmad Subhan, who lives near an air base in the Pakistan military garrison city of Rawalpindi, heard the first explosion that...
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3 weeks ago |
thestar.com.my | Saeed Shah |Asif Shahzad |Shivam Patel |Gibran Peshimam
ISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI (Reuters) - At 2.09 am on Saturday, Ahmad Subhan, who lives near an air base in the Pakistan military garrison city of Rawalpindi, heard the first explosion that rattled the windows of his house - and took South Asia to the brink of war. As dawn broke, the heaviest fighting in decades between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan reached a crescendo, after nearly three weeks of escalating tensions.
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3 weeks ago |
wtbx.com | Saeed Shah |Asif Shahzad |Shivam Patel |Gibran Peshimam
By Saeed Shah, Asif Shahzad, Shivam Patel and Gibran Naiyyar PeshimamISLAMABAD/NEW DELHI (Reuters) – At 2.09 am on Saturday, Ahmad Subhan, who lives near an air base in the Pakistan military garrison city of Rawalpindi, heard the first explosion that rattled the windows of his house – and took South Asia to the brink of war. As dawn broke, the heaviest fighting in decades between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan reached a crescendo, after nearly three weeks of escalating tensions.
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RT @idreesali114: “One U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said there was high confidence that Pakistan had used the Chinese…

Exclusive: Pakistan's Chinese-made jet brought down two Indian fighter aircraft, US officials say. I report with @idreesali114 https://t.co/eLNAtBo0BT

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