"We are following with concern the developments between Pakistan and India," the ministry said in an official statement, describing the Indian strike as a "provocative step" that Ankara strongly condemns, along with the targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure.
Türkiye urged both sides to "exercise reason and avoid unilateral actions," calling for urgent measures to reduce tensions and open channels for cooperation, particularly in the fight against terrorism, to prevent a recurrence of such incidents in the future.
Ankara also expressed support for Pakistan's call for an investigation into the "terrorist attack that occurred on April 22."Tensions between India and Pakistan escalated on April 22 after gunmen opened fire on tourists in the Pahalgam area of the Indian-administered state of Jammu and Kashmir, killing 26 people and wounding others.
Indian officials said the attackers "came from Pakistan," while Islamabad accused India of waging a disinformation campaign against it.
India decided to suspend the Indus Waters Treaty on the division of waters following the attack and asked Pakistani diplomats in New Delhi to leave the country within a week.
For its part, Pakistan denied India's accusations, restricted the number of Indian diplomatic personnel in Islamabad, declared that it would consider any interference with rivers outside the Indus Waters Treaty an "act of war," suspended all trade with India, and closed its airspace to India.