Amid heightened tensions between India and Pakistan, a mock drill is scheduled for Thursday evening, 29 May 2025, in the border states of Gujarat, Punjab, Rajasthan, and Jammu and Kashmir, which faced intense cross-border attacks during the recent four-day conflict. Authorities have advised residents to remain vigilant during the exercise, according to reports.
The drill aims to evaluate the functionality of control rooms and air raid warning systems, while also testing the efficiency of civil defence measures, including warden services, firefighting, rescue operations, depot management, and evacuation planning.
This exercise follows the Ministry of Home Affairs’ (MHA) nationwide Operation Abhyas on 7 May 2025, a mock drill conducted hours before India initiated Operation Sindoor. During Abhyas, air raid sirens were sounded, and civilians, including students, were trained on civil defence protocols to ensure safety during potential attacks.
These drills, the first since the 1971 India-Pakistan war, covered 250 locations across 33 states and union territories.
In response to Pakistan’s repeated air assaults, which were successfully countered, 32 airports in northern and northwestern India were temporarily closed as a precaution during the conflict.
Punjab, sharing a 532-kilometre border with Pakistan, placed its border districts—Ferozepur, Pathankot, Fazilka, Amritsar, Gurdaspur, and Tarn Taran—on high alert, cancelling public events and closing schools.
Similarly, Rajasthan, with a 1,037-kilometre border, shut all government and private schools in its border regions to ensure safety during the hostilities.
The upcoming drill underscores India’s focus on bolstering preparedness in border areas, particularly after the recent conflict sparked by the 22 April 2025 Pahalgam terror attack and the subsequent ceasefire, as regional security remains a priority.