The Indian military said it was a quiet night on the border between India and Pakistan, where their most serious military conflict in two decades ended on Saturday.
"The night was largely peaceful along (the Indian state of) Jammu and Kashmir and the international border, for the first time in the last few days. No incidents were reported," the army said.
Last week, India and Pakistan found themselves on the brink of a new war, with drone strikes, artillery fire, and missile attacks escalating.
On Wednesday, Indian missiles destroyed camps on Pakistani soil believed to have been harboring a jihadist group that New Delhi suspects of killing 22 civilians in the Indian part of Kashmir on April 26, causing tensions to rise.
Accused of supporting the movement, Pakistan, which denies any involvement in the attack, retaliated, drawing the two nuclear powers into a series of attacks and counterattacks.
On Saturday, US President Donald Trump announced a "complete and immediate ceasefire" between the two rivals, which was immediately confirmed by both countries.
According to Agence France-Presse, around 60 Indian and Pakistani civilians were killed in the fighting.
The two countries accused each other of violating the ceasefire on Saturday night, but no further incidents have been reported since then.
Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, both claiming the entire territory. The two countries have fought two wars over the Himalayan region in the past.
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