Arab Times

India, Pakistan clash ends brief truce

‘2 Indian border officers killed’

-

SRINAGAR, India, June 3, (AFP): India and Pakistan exchanged fire across the Kashmir border on Sunday, officials said, killing two guards and ending a day-old agreement to honour a ceasefire in the disputed region.

Seven civilians were also injured at Aknoor, near the contested territory’s border with Pakistan, in a barrage that claimed the lives of two Indian border officers.

India’s Border Security Force said its troops returned fire after Pakistani border rangers in Sialkot fired into Kashmir without provocatio­n in the early hours of Sunday.

“The injured soldiers were immediatel­y evacuated to a military hospital where they later succumbed (to their injuries),” border force spokesman Manoj Yadav told AFP from Jammu, the winter capital of the restive Himalayan region.

Pakistan authoritie­s did not immediatel­y comment on India’s allegation­s or whether any damage was sustained on their side of the border.

The salvo of gun and mortar fire came just four days after Pakistan and India promised to end ceasefire violations in Kashmir.

The two sides had pledged to respect the conditions laid out in a 2003 ceasefire “in letter and spirit” following some of the highest levels of violence in Kashmir since the pact was signed.

Both sides blame each other for violating the 15-year ceasefire.

Dozens have been killed in border clashes in recent months along the border that divides the territory into zones of Indian and Pakistani control, leaving residents terrified.

The renewed commitment to the ceasefire had encouraged thousands of civilians to return to their homes after weeks of shelling.

Kashmir has been divided since the end of British colonial rule in 1947 and both New Delhi and Islamabad claim the former Himalayan kingdom in full.

India has about 500,000 soldiers in the part of Kashmir it controls, where armed groups are fighting for independen­ce or a merger with Pakistan.

The flare-up along the border comes amid a rise in street riots and militant violence in the Kashmir valley, which witnesses near-daily demonstrat­ions against Indian rule.

New Delhi accuses Pakistan of fuelling an insurgency that has left tens of thousands of civilians dead. Islamabad denies this, saying it only provides diplomatic support to Kashmiris’ right to selfdeterm­ination.

Police fired tear gas and chilli spray grenades to disperse thousands of mourners taking part in a funeral procession for a youth who died on Saturday after being run over by a paramilita­ry vehicle in Indian Kashmir.

Protesters hurled back stones at Indian security forces in the latest outbreak of violence in the divided region’s main city, Srinagar. At least four demonstrat­ors were injured, according to police and eyewitness­es.

“There were some incidents of stone pelting in downtown but our (policemen) exhibited restraint and used minimum force,” Kashmir police inspector general S.P. Pani told AFP.

Kaiser Bhat, 21, died in hospital after being hit by a Central Reserve Paramilita­ry Force vehicle near the city’s Central Mosque on Friday during a demonstrat­ion against alleged police violence.

A video that allegedly shows the armoured vehicle hitting protesters has been widely shared on social media.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait