Jammu, May 10 -- Jammu and Kashmir chief minister Omar Abdullah on Friday asked Pakistan to "apply some brain" and de-escalate the situation. He said, "They should silence their guns and in turn, our guns will fall silent automatically," he said. Responding to media queries at a relief camp in Samba, he said, "There will neither be any benefit to Pakistan, nor will they succeed by escalating the situation. It would be better they silence their guns to normalise the situation." The chief minister recalled the drone attacks on Jammu region from a day earlier. "Around 9pm last night, they started and then at 4.30 am, they again attacked us, making it clear that they want to escalate. But that will be counter productive for them", said Omar. He said Poonch bore the maximum brunt of Pakistan shelling. "I met the injured in GMC Jammu and all of them were from Poonch. My deputy chief minister is trying to reach out to the people of Poonch. A seriously injured has been evacuated to PGI, Chandigarh, where he underwent surgery," he added. On relief camps, he said that the J&K government was providing three meals a day, two teas along with sanitation, medical facilities, doctors, ambulances and transport. "I know this is not an ideal situation but they (people) had to be brought here. We were compelled to do so because of the situation," he said. The CM said that he can't predict what would unfold next. "First, Pakistan has to decide,what exactly do they want. If they want that we compete with their drones, we have more drones and our weapons better. They will lose," he said. Omar called Thursday's aerial strikes as one of the "most serious assaults" on the city since the 1971 war. He said Pakistan should focus on de-escalation amid the military conflict. Omar visited camps at Mishriwala, Nagbani, Kot Bhalwal in Jammu district and Vijaypur in Samba....