Arab News

Tensions soar along Indian, Pakistan frontier in Kashmir

Islamabad asks Delhi to respect cease-fire

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SRINAGAR: Tensions have soared along the volatile frontier between India and Pakistan in the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, as rival troops shelled villages and border posts for a third day Friday.

Three civilians and two soldiers were killed on both sides in the latest clash, officials in the two countries said, as each blamed the other for initiating the violence.

Indian officials said two civilians, an army soldier and a paramilita­ry soldier died and at least 24 civilians and two soldiers were injured in Indiancont­rolled Kashmir. According to Pakistani officials, Indian fire on Friday killed a civilian and wounded nine others in Sialkot in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab province.

An Indian paramilita­ry officer said soldiers were responding to Pakistani firing and shelling on dozens of border posts and called it an “unprovoked” violation of a 2003 cease-fire accord.

Angered over the rising violence, Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry summoned Indian Deputy High Commission­er J.P. Singh and condemned what it called “unprovoked cease-fire violations” by India.

Each country has also accused the other of initiating past border skirmishes and causing civilian and military casualties.

The fighting is taking place along a somewhat-defined frontier where each country has a separate paramilita­ry border force guarding the lower-altitude 200-km boundary separating Indiancont­rolled Kashmir and the Pakistani province of Punjab.

The contentiou­s frontier also includes a 740-km rugged and mountainou­s stretch called the Line of Control that is guarded by the armies of India and Pakistan.

The Indian officer, speaking on condition of anonymity in keeping with official policy, said Friday’s shelling came after relative calm overnight in Jammu following two days of fighting that left at least three civilians and a soldier dead and several others wounded on both sides.

The border guard official said by Friday evening fighting had stopped in most places but continued at about half a dozen outposts.

The fighting escalated late Friday in Sunderbani sector, where Indian and Pakistani soldiers fired guns and mortars at each other’s positions. Col. Nitin Joshi, an Indian army spokesman, said one soldier was killed in the Pakistani firing.

Indian police officer S.D. Singh said shells have landed in dozens of villages since early Friday. He said authoritie­s deployed bulletproo­f vehicles to evacuate people who were injured and sick. Bullets and shrapnel scarred homes and walls amid the intense firing and shelling.

Dozens of schools in villages along the frontier have been closed and authoritie­s advised residents to stay indoors as shells and bullets rained down. Some damage to houses was reported on the Indian side.

Pakistan urged India to respect the cease-fire, investigat­e the latest incidents and maintain peace on the frontier. It also asked India to allow the UN Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan to play its mandated role in accordance with Security Council resolution­s.

“This unpreceden­ted escalation in cease-fire violations by India is continuing” since 2017 despite calls for restraint from Islamabad, Pakistan’s statement said.

India’s Foreign Ministry condemned what it called “continued and unpreceden­ted cease-fire violation by Pakistan, which has caused also loss of lives and properties.”

“Pakistan violates the ceasefire as a cover to infiltrate terrorists across the border into India. We of course retaliate in such cases,” said Raveesh Kumar, India’s Foreign Ministry spokesman. “We’ll also take up the matter at appropriat­e level with the Pakistani side.”

The exchange of fire comes days after Islamabad accused Indian forces of killing four Pakistani soldiers along the Line of Control in Kashmir, where rebel groups demand that Kashmir be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independen­t country.

 ??  ?? Mother of Indian teenage girl Neelam Devi wails before her funeral in Pindi in Arnia district of Jammu and Kashmir, India, on Thursday. Indian officials say the teenage girl and a soldier have been killed by Pakistani troops firing along the volatile...
Mother of Indian teenage girl Neelam Devi wails before her funeral in Pindi in Arnia district of Jammu and Kashmir, India, on Thursday. Indian officials say the teenage girl and a soldier have been killed by Pakistani troops firing along the volatile...

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