ISLAMABAD: Caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar on Wednesday paid homage to Pakistani soldiers who gave up their lives for the safety and security of the state, saying the whole nation was indebted to their sacrifices.
Kakar made the statement during a ceremony to mark the 58th Defense and Martyrs’ Day, which is observed annually to recall Pakistan’s response to the Indian forces that crossed the international border to launch an attack on the country’s eastern Punjab province on the same day in 1965.
New Delhi’s actions were in response to Pakistan’s attempt to seize control of the Indian-administered territory of Jammu and Kashmir. The entire region remains a subject of dispute between the two nations, with both holding partial control and asserting full claims over it.
“Our martyrs who embraced martyrdom for the sake of their people and the country can never be forgotten and will always remain in our hearts,” the prime minister told the ceremony.
Earlier in the day, Pakistan’s senior military leaders also paid tribute to the country’s fallen soldiers, emphasizing that September 6, a day synonymous with “heroism and sacrifice,” continued to serve as a source of inspiration for successive generations within the country.
“We owe our freedom and peace to unprecedented sacrifices of our martyrs and veterans,” the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said in a statement. “Pakistan Armed Forces remain committed to ensuring the defense of motherland against all internal and external threats.”
The ISPR added that any hostile efforts to spoil the country’s peace would be met with the full might of Pakistani armed forces.