Pakistan and India have extended airspace restrictions for each other's aircraft in tit-for-tat moves, both countries said on Friday, amid continuing diplomatic tensions between the neighbours after a brief military conflict this month.
The Pakistan Airports Authority said the restriction applied to "all aircraft registered, operated, owned, or leased by India", including military planes, until 4:59 AM local time on June 24 (2359 GMT on June 23).
India's Civil Aviation Ministry issued a corresponding NOTAM (Notice to Airmen), saying Pakistani-registered, operated, owned, or leased aircraft, including military flights, would be barred from Indian airspace through June 23.
The move extends restrictions first imposed last month.
Tensions flared following a deadly attack on tourists in India's Jammu and Kashmir region in April, eventually triggering the worst military conflict in nearly three decades between the nuclear-armed rivals.
The two countries agreed to a ceasefire on May 10.

No evidence alleged Bondi gunmen received military training in Philippines
At least 12 killed in Nigeria mining site attack
UN, aid groups warn Gaza operations at risk from Israel impediments
Israel approves natural gas deal with Egypt, Netanyahu says
US approves $11.1 billion largest-ever arms package for Taiwan
