The remote school at the centre of a dispute between nuclear neighbours Pakistan and India
ABCIt was at the centre of a clash that almost brought two nuclear nations to war, but exactly what goes on inside a small madrasa on a hilltop near Kashmir remains a mystery. Key points: Tensions escalated sharply between India and Pakistan in February after a suicide bombing in Kashmir Pakistan denies that a remote religious school harbours the terrorist group Jaish-e-Mohammed India said it killed 300 militants in an airstrike in February, but the ABC found no evidence to back this claim One thing is clear: India's claim that it destroyed a militant training camp and killed more than 300 extremists cannot be backed up by the evidence. More than a month after India launched airstrikes inside Pakistan in retaliation for a militant attack that killed 40 paramilitary troops in Kashmir, foreign media have been allowed to see the areas hit. "You have seen the craters yourselves, where the bombs were dropped and they just hit the open ground," Pakistan military spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor said. "You have come here for yourself and have seen that it is one of the thousands of education madrasas based on philanthropy inside Pakistan," Major General Ghafoor said.