Archive May 8, 2025

The largest cities yet to have a Premier League team

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London, Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds and… Bristol?

Despite being the eighth-biggest city in England, Bristol has never hosted Premier League football – but that could be about to change.

After reaching the Championship play-offs, a two-legged semi-final against Sheffield United and a possible final against Coventry or Sunderland at Wembley is all that stands between the Robins and the top flight.

Bristol City were relegated from Division One – the top tier prior to the introduction of the Premier League – in 1979-80 and have spent the past 25 seasons trying to get back to the top table.

The closest they have come was in 2007-08, but Hull proved too strong in the Championship play-off final.

After 10 successive seasons in the second tier, are Bristol City ready to end their exile?

Their city rivals Bristol Rovers have played in the third tier or lower since their relegation from Division One in 1992–93.

With an estimated population of about 480,000, Bristol is by far the biggest English city that has never had a Premier League team.

Doncaster

Doncaster had plenty to celebrate in 2022 when it was named as one of eight new cities for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

But its estimated 314,252 residents have not had much to celebrate on the football pitch in recent years.

Doncaster Rovers were relegated to League Two in 2021-22 and suffered defeat in the play-off semi-finals last season.

Milton Keynes

With an estimated population of nearly 300,000, Milton Keynes is one of the fastest-growing cities in the country.

But it still has some way to catch up in terms of attracting Premier League football, with MK Dons having only been formed back in 2004 after Wimbledon moved north from London

While technically a continuation of Wimbledon – who have played in the Premier League – they are considered a new club after their controversial relocation.

Salford

Sitting in the shadow of Manchester – home of course to City and United – Salford has a population of about 282,000.

Following investment from a quintet of ex-Manchester United players – Gary and Phil Neville, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes and Nicky Butt – along with businessman Peter Lim, Salford City have established themselves as a Football League club.

Salford City had never played above the fifth tier (currently National League level) before 2019-20.

Plymouth

Plymouth, with an estimated population of 256,000, is the fourth-biggest English city unable to boast any history of Premier League football.

After 13 seasons bouncing between League One and League Two, Plymouth Argyle did make it to the Championship for 2024-25. However, it proved a step too far as they were relegated.

Preston

Preston is the 21st biggest city in England, with an estimated population of 252,000.

The club is steeped in history and was one of the 12 founding members of the Football League in 1888, but a place in the Premier League has so far been elusive.

Preston’s most recent top-flight campaign was back in 1960-61, with each of their past 10 seasons spent in the Championship.

Peterborough

Not only has Peterborough never hosted Premier League football, they have also never experienced the top flight.

They got closest in 1992-93, when they achieved their highest finish of 10th in Division One (now the Championship).

York

After nine seasons outside of the Football League, York City are dreaming of a place in League Two.

York, a city with an estimated population of 202,000, has no shortage of attractions, with its castle, minster and winding medieval streets.

However, unlike many other cities in Yorkshire – Leeds, Sheffield, Bradford, Huddersfield and Barnsley – the people of York have not enjoyed the treat of the Premier League.

York City have spent the past 10 seasons outside of the Football League but they are a club on the up, with League Two in their sights.

Southend-on-Sea

With a population of about 180,000, Southend is another of England’s larger cities that has never had a Premier League football team.

In truth, they have never been close.

They have spent most of their existence bouncing between England’s third and fourth tiers although did enjoy a brief spell in the Championship in 2006 – before instant relegation.

What other cities have yet to play in Premier League?

Other notable mentions still waiting for Premier League football include the likes of Championship club Oxford (population 162,000), League One side Exeter (population 130,000), and League Two’s Colchester (population of 100,000).

Northampton (population 250,000) is the largest town to have never had a Premier League football team, although the Cobblers did play in the top flight in 1965-66.

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David Attenborough leaves directors in in tears over ‘biggest message’ he’s ever told ahead of his birthday

As David Attenborough releases his feature- length film Oceans, the broadcaster left the producers as well as himself in tears with his most important message yet

Sir David Attenborough has delivered a powerful message in his latest film(Image: DAILY MIRROR)

As Sir David Attenborough turns 99, the wildlife legend has shared many messages over the years – but his recent documentary has the “most important” yet.

Oceans With David Attenborough will be released in cinemas this week to mark his 99th birthday – as it mirrors his life, along with 100 years of discovery of the seas.

The broadcaster urged people to look after the seas to help save our planet, as his final words on saving the world’s oceans brought him to tears, and he hopes his film could help protect the planet from climate change.

Oceans took two years to film, as it explores coral reefs, kelp forests and the vast oceans, as Sir David shares why having healthy oceans is so important in keeping the planet safe and stable.

READ MORE: King Charles joins Sir David Attenborough at Ocean premiere to deliver important message

Sir David Attenborough
Sir David Attenborough is celebrating his 99th birthday and has a poignant message (Image: PA)

Toby Nowlan, one of Ocean’s directors, told Sky News that the film was “very different” to any of his previous work.

Article continues below

“Nothing has come close to how important this film is. I remember sitting on a very cold beach off Sussex, filming with him, and we were doing the opening and closing words for the film. It was such a poignant moment. They were the most powerful words I’ve ever heard him say,” he said.

In the film, Sir David shares a poignant message about how, after almost 100 years on Earth, he believes the planet’s oceans are the most important area to protect.

Nowlan shared: “And if we save the ocean, we save our world. It really hit me and, yeah, I welled up. There’s been a lot of doom and gloom over the last few years – we want the take home to be: if we save our ocean, we can make a huge difference for our climate, for our fisheries, for conservation, for food security.”

The director said that this message is the “biggest” yet from Attenborough, and it’s also ultimately one of hope, too. The film is one he believes could play a role in saving biodiversity and protecting the planet from climate change.

READ MORE: Sir David Attenborough’s diet for a long life as broadcaster set to turn 99 this week

Sir David takes viewers back to his first scuba dive in 1957 on the Great Barrier Reef. He said: “I was so taken aback by the spectacle before me I forgot – momentarily – to breathe.”

Devastatingly, there has been a catastrophic decline in life with the broadcasting veteran noting: “We are almost out of time.” Sir David even revealed the state of the ocean almost made him lose hope for future life on our planet.

However, what has kept him from his despair has been the “most remarkable discovery of all” that the ocean can “recover faster than we had ever imagined”.

The key message in his film is that all is not lost, as he hopes it will spur leaders to take action. “The ocean can bounce back to life,” Sir David said. “If left alone it may not just recover but thrive beyond anything anyone alive has ever seen.”

Do you have a story to share? Email niamh.kirk@reachplc.com

Article continues below

READ MORE: Shopper ‘couldn’t go a day without a spot’ before using dermatologist-approved serum

David Attenborough leaves directors in in tears over ‘biggest message’ he’s ever told ahead of his birthday

As David Attenborough releases his feature- length film Oceans, the broadcaster left the producers as well as himself in tears with his most important message yet

Sir David Attenborough has delivered a powerful message in his latest film(Image: DAILY MIRROR)

As Sir David Attenborough turns 99, the wildlife legend has shared many messages over the years – but his recent documentary has the “most important” yet.

Oceans With David Attenborough will be released in cinemas this week to mark his 99th birthday – as it mirrors his life, along with 100 years of discovery of the seas.

The broadcaster urged people to look after the seas to help save our planet, as his final words on saving the world’s oceans brought him to tears, and he hopes his film could help protect the planet from climate change.

Oceans took two years to film, as it explores coral reefs, kelp forests and the vast oceans, as Sir David shares why having healthy oceans is so important in keeping the planet safe and stable.

READ MORE: King Charles joins Sir David Attenborough at Ocean premiere to deliver important message

Sir David Attenborough
Sir David Attenborough is celebrating his 99th birthday and has a poignant message (Image: PA)

Toby Nowlan, one of Ocean’s directors, told Sky News that the film was “very different” to any of his previous work.

Article continues below

“Nothing has come close to how important this film is. I remember sitting on a very cold beach off Sussex, filming with him, and we were doing the opening and closing words for the film. It was such a poignant moment. They were the most powerful words I’ve ever heard him say,” he said.

In the film, Sir David shares a poignant message about how, after almost 100 years on Earth, he believes the planet’s oceans are the most important area to protect.

Nowlan shared: “And if we save the ocean, we save our world. It really hit me and, yeah, I welled up. There’s been a lot of doom and gloom over the last few years – we want the take home to be: if we save our ocean, we can make a huge difference for our climate, for our fisheries, for conservation, for food security.”

The director said that this message is the “biggest” yet from Attenborough, and it’s also ultimately one of hope, too. The film is one he believes could play a role in saving biodiversity and protecting the planet from climate change.

READ MORE: Sir David Attenborough’s diet for a long life as broadcaster set to turn 99 this week

Sir David takes viewers back to his first scuba dive in 1957 on the Great Barrier Reef. He said: “I was so taken aback by the spectacle before me I forgot – momentarily – to breathe.”

Devastatingly, there has been a catastrophic decline in life with the broadcasting veteran noting: “We are almost out of time.” Sir David even revealed the state of the ocean almost made him lose hope for future life on our planet.

However, what has kept him from his despair has been the “most remarkable discovery of all” that the ocean can “recover faster than we had ever imagined”.

The key message in his film is that all is not lost, as he hopes it will spur leaders to take action. “The ocean can bounce back to life,” Sir David said. “If left alone it may not just recover but thrive beyond anything anyone alive has ever seen.”

Do you have a story to share? Email niamh.kirk@reachplc.com

Article continues below

READ MORE: Shopper ‘couldn’t go a day without a spot’ before using dermatologist-approved serum

Meet Michele Kang – the woman leading a football revolution

“Our phones, and text messages, have been ringing off the hook”, says owner Michele Kang with a smile.

It is 72 hours on from her London City Lionesses winning promotion to the Women’s Super League.

And it is easy to see why players, who 18 months ago would have baulked at the idea of joining this club, are now desperate to be a part of its Hollywood-style story.

Kang only bought the Lionesses in December 2023, when they were on the brink of liquidation. But thanks to her huge financial investment and long-term vision, she has turned this once failing team into hot property.

“I jump in before anyone can say this is a good thing or in most cases they think I’m crazy,” she tells BBC Sport. “This was not the first time I’ve been called crazy. But I absolutely saw the potential and with a little focus, I have never looked back”.

London City secured the point they needed for the Championship title with an enthralling 2-2 draw against title rivals Birmingham at St Andrew’s in front of a 9,000-strong crowd.

But if you were watching the match on television, you would have been forgiven for asking who was the glamorous woman at the heart of the team’s celebrations.

Immaculately dressed in a cream trench coat and now trademark dark sunglasses, the 65-year-old Kang took centre stage at the trophy presentation, lifting it with her captain Kosovare Asllani as streamers and fizz popped around them.

Most owners usually celebrate such achievements from the directors’ box. Not Kang, though.

Her approach to that moment matches her approach to how she does everything. She does it her way.

“Here we are, we made it. It just tells you that with proper investment and anything is possible,” said Kang.

London City are just one part of what is rapidly becoming a global women’s football empire for the wealthy American businesswoman, with Kang also owning eight-time Women’s Champions League winners Lyon and Washington Spirit in the United States.

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While winning the Championship is an outstanding achievement, the WSL will be a huge step up for her side.

Kang insists they are not aiming to simply survive in the top flight, but to thrive.

And that is why at 9am, the morning after the promotion celebrations, her team – including manager Jocelyn Prêcheur, who she lured from Paris St-Germain and sporting director Markel Zubizarreta, who was poached from the Spanish FA – were already planning for life in the top tier.

“Our vision from day one, when we started out this journey a year ago, was building at least a mid-tier WSL team,” Kang adds. “We’ve seen a lot of men’s and women’s teams get promoted and the next year they get relegated.

“So we’ve been trying to build a team that when we got up, we can stay there and be very competitive. We recruited players that way and staffing that way.”

When asked how many players they’re aiming to recruit this summer, Kang jokes those decisions are “above my pay grade”.

“I do sometimes participate in convincing and persuading players to join us, but ultimately who we recruit is down to the sporting director and our manager’s job,” she says. “I have full confidence in them.”

That said, no-one would be surprised to see a host of international stars arriving at the club’s training base in Aylesford, Kent, before the new season starts in September.

Despite being in the Championship, Kang enticed Sweden internationals Asllani and Sofia Jakobsson, Japanese World Cup champion Saki Kumagai, and ex-Barcelona midfielder Maria Perez to join London City.

For Asllani, who had spells at PSG, Manchester City and Real Madrid in her career, playing under a female owner was one of the huge draws.

“For the first time, I was like OK we have a woman investing, not just talking, actually giving us all the resources we need to succeed,” said the 35-year-old, who won the WSL with Manchester City in 2016.

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But it is not just on the pitch where Kang has spent her money as she sees the bigger picture of what a successful team needs.

At the training ground at Cobdown Park, seven Fifa-compliant pitches are set to be ready for the players this summer. There are ambitious plans to build a performance campus, although planning permission for the proposed buildings and facilities has not yet been secured.

Talking of the proposals, Kang adds: “It’s going to be the state-of-the-art training centre, better than actually many of the men’s Premier League training centres.”

The club plays its matches at Hayes Lane, which they groundshare with League Two men’s side Bromley, but Kang says they are exploring building a purpose-built stadium for her side.

Kang and PrecheurGetty Images

Born in Seoul, South Korea, Kang moved to the United States to study. She then made her money in healthcare and IT, with Forbes magazine placing her wealth at $1.2bn (£900m).

Her love affair with women’s football has been a whirlwind. Having been invited to her first ever match at Washington Spirit in 2021, Kang instantly fell in love with the sport.

“It was cold April day, and I still remember vividly. I was mesmerised, like really totally converted,” she says.

“There’s something about being just at a stadium environment with the players, just the competitive spirit going back and forth, it is just absolutely the best. And I think that’s really eventually what got me.”

By 2022 Kang was the majority owner of the Spirit. A year later she added London City Lionesses to her portfolio before buying Lyon in 2024.

“It is a lot of fun,” she admits. “I don’t have my own children, but all of a sudden I have three teams and players across the Atlantic Ocean. I try to actually be at the games and support my players. That’s really, ultimately, the fun part.”

It may be fun, but her clubs are not charities, but businesses.

“I saw an incredible potential of where it was versus where it could be,” says Kang. “The gap I thought was tremendous and I was really surprised no-one saw that, let alone investing in realising that gap.”

So how do the capital’s Lionesses now compete in a division and create a fanbase that already has four established London clubs in Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham and West Ham?

“[Washington] Spirit will be the first one to break even because they are two, three years ahead and we invested heavily in fan development and corporate partnership,” reveals Kang.

“The models and the best practice are being copied both at Lyon and London City, and the Spirit are also learning from what Lyon have done. So we’re all learning from each other.

“At London City, so far our focus has been on the product, the sporting side, but we will heavily, heavily invest in fan development and building some significant fandom and engagement.

Kang’s three clubs come under the umbrella of her Kynisca Sports International venture. But it does not stop at just investing in women’s football.

In August 2024, Kynisca announced it was setting up a $50m (£39.2) global investment fund to help improve the health and performance of elite female athletes.

It was something Kang said would be “a new era for female athletic potential” and “drive lasting change”.

One of the first recipients was the US rugby 7’s team who were awarded $4m (£2.9m) after winning bronze at the Paris Olympics – a donation star player Ilona Maher described as “really impactful”.

“She saw our value, which we already knew we had, but this was someone truly seeing it and investing in it and this is setting us up for hopefully a win in LA 2028,” said Maher, 28.

Kang has also pledged a $30m (£23.6m) donation to US Soccer over the next five years, with the aim of transforming women and girl’s football in America.

“She puts her money where her mouth is,” former Chelsea and current USWNT manager Emma Hayes tells BBC Sport.

“Let me be clear about this, she’s an astute businesswoman. She knows that women’s sport is one of the areas of sport that has the opportunity to explode.”

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Trump to announce trade deal with UK on Thursday, reports say

United States President Donald Trump is set to announce a trade deal with the United Kingdom on Thursday, US media have reported, in what would be the first such agreement since he rolled out his sweeping tariffs.

The reports come after Trump on Wednesday teased the announcement of a deal with an unnamed country on social media.

“Big News Conference tomorrow morning at 10: 00 A. M., The Oval Office, concerning a MAJOR TRADE DEAL WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF A BIG, AND HIGHLY RESPECTED, COUNTRY”, Trump said in a post on his&nbsp, Truth Social platform. “THE FIRST OF MANY!! “!

The New York Times, which reported the news along with The Wall Street Journal, Politico and CNN, said that it was not clear whether the agreement had been finalised.

Investors have been anxiously waiting for signs of an easing of Trump’s trade war amid fears that prolonged uncertainty over tariffs could inflict serious damage to the global economy.

The International Monetary Fund last month lowered its global growth forecast for 2025 from 3.3 percent to 2.8 percent amid Trump’s trade salvoes.

On Tuesday, US and Chinese officials confirmed that they would hold their first round of trade talks in Switzerland this weekend, raising hopes of a breakthrough in the de facto mutual trade embargo between the world’s two largest economies.

The UK was spared from Trump’s “reciprocal” tariffs announced against dozens of countries last month, but its exports have been subject to a 10 percent “baseline” duty since April 9.

The US and UK did 314.6 billion pounds ($419bn) worth of trade in goods and services in 2024, an increase of 3.9 percent from the previous year, according to the UK’s Department for Business and Trade.

‘Don’t want war’: Kashmiri towns caught in deadly India-Pakistan crossfire

Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir – As the camera panned around a home blown up by the mortar fire in Poonch, an embattled hill city perched on the disputed border between India and Pakistan, a disembodied female voice cried out.

“This is a calamity.”

The video, shared with Al Jazeera by locals in Poonch, revealed a collapsed staircase, large craters in the walls, and a courtyard cluttered with rubble and clothes, and painted in blood.

“Everything I built is in ruins,” the voice exclaimed, loaded with anguish.

At least 11 people have been killed in Poonch district from Pakistani firing into Indian-administered Kashmir since early May 7, in retaliation for Indian missile strikes that hit multiple sites across Pakistan’s Punjab province and Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

The Indian strikes – themselves a response to a deadly attack on tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir’s Pahalgam on April 22 – mark the most extensive attack on Pakistani soil since their 1971 war that ended with the eastern wing of Pakistan lopped off, resulting in the creation of Bangladesh.

Yet, as the nuclear-armed neighbours stand on the edge of a potential military conflict, many Kashmiris say they are facing the brunt of their tensions. Pakistan’s bombardment of Indian-administered Kashmir on Wednesday night was, according to locals and experts, the most intense shelling that villages and towns in the region have seen in more than 40 years.

“This was a night of terror,” Rameez Choudhary, a resident of Poonch, told Al Jazeera.

The dead, officials told Al Jazeera, included two siblings who were crushed to death after an exploding shell dropped on their house; two local store-owners who were hit by the raining munitions; a seven-year-old child; a teenage boy; a 35-year-old homemaker; and four other men.

The worst-hit villages in Poonch district were Shahpur, Mankote and Krishna Ghati, while shelling also intensified in Rajouri district’s Laam, Manjakote, and Gambhir Brahmana areas as residents fled to safety.

A residential house is pictured after it was damaged by cross-border shelling in Salamabad in Indian-administered Kashmir’s Baramulla district, May 7, 2025 [Reuters]

‘This war has been forced upon us’

The border skirmishes have followed the deadly attack at the tourist resort town of Pahalgam in Indian-administered Kashmir two weeks ago, in which 26 people, mostly Indian visitors holidaying in the disputed region, were killed.

During the wee hours on Wednesday, Indian military warplanes arced across the skyline and fired missiles and other munitions into neighbouring Pakistan. Indian authorities said they targeted at least nine locations inside Pakistan.

India charges Pakistan with supporting the armed group that attacked Indian tourists. Pakistan, however, has denied the accusation. India claims its missiles hit “terror base camps”, but Pakistan says the strikes killed 31 people, all of whom were “innocent civilians”.

The scale and spread of the current military tensions – India struck four cities separated by hundreds of kilometres in Pakistan’s Punjab province, in addition to sites in Pakistan-administered Kashmir – make them even graver, in some ways, than the last war between the neighbours in 1999, say some experts.

Back then, servicemen from the Pakistani army had disguised themselves as rebel fighters and taken up positions in the snow-covered, craggy mountains of Kargil, territory under de facto Indian control, leading to a conflict. Hundreds of soldiers died on each side, but the battles were – unlike this week – contained to Kargil.

“This war has been forced upon us. The [Pahalgam] attack was aimed at provoking a situation in which we have no option but to strike back,” said Tara Kartha, director at the Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS), a New Delhi-based think tank, and a former official at India’s National Security Council Secretariat.

To be sure, the countries came close to war in 2019 in the aftermath of the deadly attack in Pulwama town in South Kashmir when a suicide bomber blew up an Indian paramilitary motorcade, killing 40 Indian servicemen. Indian fighter jets fired missiles that struck Balakot in Pakistan-administered Kashmir.

But according to Kartha, the current crisis is different.

“Both sides carefully managed 2019. Everything was kept confined to a certain limit. But this time, it has been brutal,” she said, while arguing that “India has been very mature”. Pakistan’s military and civilian government have, however, accused India of fanning the flames of war and escalating tensions.

Caught on the front lines of their confrontation are Kashmiris. On Wednesday, three different regions in Indian-administered Kashmir were struck by Pakistani shelling.

“Initially, we thought it was thunder. The skies rumbled at 1am,” Altaf Amin, a 22-year-old resident of Chandak village in Poonch, told Al Jazeera.

Villagers sit in a tractor trolley as they move to safer places as authorities evacuate residents living near the International Border (IB) with Pakistan, in Suchetgarh, in India-administered Jammu and Kashmir, May 7, 2025. REUTERS/Stringer
Villagers sit in a tractor trolley as they move to safer places as authorities evacuate residents living near the border with Pakistan, in Suchetgarh, in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, May 7, 2025. Many locals say the government was too slow to start evacuations [Reuters]

‘We don’t want war’

Poonch is just 10km (six miles) from the Line of Control (LoC), the contested border that separates the Indian- and Pakistan-controlled territories in Kashmir.  “The shelling has continued on and off since yesterday. But now, it has stopped,” said Amin.

Social media was quickly flooded with videos showing the severity of the human toll in the border shelling. A clip whose veracity was authenticated by Al Jazeera shows the bloodied body of a teenage boy being carried into a van in Poonch. One of his arms had been blown apart. The different segments in the same clip showed a lifeless body of a child, his head ripped open by a shell.

Amid it all, one refrain emerged loud and clear: “We don’t want war,” said Amin.

Yet, there is also anger on the ground against local authorities.

“People in Poonch are angry because there was no attempt to get them evacuated,” Zafar Choudhary, a political analyst and veteran journalist based in the Jammu region, told Al Jazeera.

Choudhary said that the strikes from the Pakistani side should have been anticipated by the Indian government, and people should have been evacuated to avoid the casualties.

“But none of that happened, which has left people infuriated. There’s a feeling that whenever the trouble between the two warring nations has erupted in the past, it is the people of these hill regions who have borne its brunt,” he said.

Interactive_Kashmir_LineOfControl_April23_2025

Silent guns roar again

The LoC traverses a 740km (459-mile) circuitous route through the mountains, forested ridges, alpine lakes and rivers of the disputed Kashmir region. The line came into being in 1949 after the newly independent India and Pakistan fought their first war over Kashmir, which was then one of the 565 princely states ruled indirectly by colonial Britain.

As both countries rallied their militaries to claim the picturesque region, they eventually settled for a stalemate that forced them to recognise each other’s spheres of influence. The ceasefire line was given recognition by the United Nations, which tried to mediate a referendum in Kashmir so that its people could choose their future.

The vote never happened, and both nations continued to spar occasionally along the disputed border. After the 1971 war that Pakistan lost to India, the ceasefire line was renamed as the LoC. In 2003, after a more than decade-long uprising in Kashmir began to subside, and both countries initiated a peace process to ease hostilities, India took advantage of the truce period to fence off its side of LoC with spools of concertina wire.

The two countries agreed to a ceasefire deal that they renewed in 2021.

Four years later, that agreement effectively lies in tatters.

Broken glass pieces are seen on a carpet inside a residential house after it was partailly damaged by a cross-border shelling in Salamabad in India-administered Kashmir's Baramulla district, May 7, 2025. REUTERS/Stringer
Broken glass pieces are seen on a carpet inside a residential house after it was partially damaged by cross-border shelling in Salamabad in Indian-administered Kashmir’s Baramulla district, May 7, 2025 [Reuters]

‘This shelling is unprecedented’

Amin, the villager in Chandak, said that although artillery duels have been common in the border area, the guns had fallen relatively silent since both countries reaffirmed the 2003 ceasefire deal four years ago. “We are familiar with cross-border shelling. But this shelling is unprecedented.”

Another resident from Poonch, which is where most damage has taken place, said that people there have now started following a series of war protocols announced by the government, including building makeshift bunkers.

Residents said many schools in Chandak have been converted into relief centres, with provisions of food and other essentials.

Nearly 260km (162 miles) away from Poonch district, the residents of Salamabad Uri, a border village in Baramulla district, northern Kashmir, have fled their homes, too.

“Last night, the shelling was so intense that two houses were burned down and many people were wounded in the fire from across the border,” Mushtaq Ahmad, 40, a cab driver from the village, said. Ahmad has now moved to the town of Uri.

Salamabad, which is ringed by a pine-covered massif that juts out into Pakistan, has been devastated by near-continuous shelling. Powerful blasts have ripped away corrugated iron roofs from homes, exposing them to harsh sunlight. The inferno caused by the shelling has blazed through neighbourhoods, leaving behind smouldering debris.

“We fear the worst,” said Ahmad, adding that his two daughters, aged 9 and 11, are frightened.

“They are asking why it happened? Would we be killed?” Ahmad says, adding that the cross-border shelling started at 2am on Wednesday, and left two minors – a 13-year-old girl and a four-year-old boy – wounded.

Ghulam Muhammad Chopan, an 80-year-old resident, said that he felt too old to leave his home, but that there was no other option.

“At this age, I had to leave my house. At night, the firing was so intense that by dawn, the village was empty. Everyone fled,” he said.

In Wuyan town in Pampore, a highland area surrounded by a maze of escarpments where the prized Kashmiri saffron grows, townspeople said they were jolted out of their sleep at 1:30am after they heard a loud booming sound.

“A fireball exploded with a flash,” said Gulzar Ahmad, a resident. “I could see two aircraft. One of them returned promptly. But the other one that exploded, its wreckage had fallen into a school playground. Later, it started emitting acrid smoke that drew a large crowd.”

Pakistan claims it shot down five Indian fighter jets on Wednesday morning. While multiple independent reports suggest that at least three planes were indeed shot down, India is yet to confirm any such losses.

As uncertainty lingers over the escalation of tensions between India and Pakistan, locals in Indian-administered Kashmir are fearful and uncertain about their future.

Residents have started hoarding food, fuel and other essential items, anxious and desperate to survive violence they never invited.