Cape Argus

Pakistan shelling of Kashmir kills five

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JAMMU: Five members of a family were killed and at least eight people injured yesterday in cross-border shelling between Indian and Pakistani soldiers in disputed Kashmir, officials said, as the two rivals traded blame for initiating the violence.

The five were killed after a shell fired by Pakistani soldiers hit their home in the Poonch region of India-controlled Kashmir along the militarise­d line of control that divides the Himalayan territory between the two nuclear-armed neighbours, said SP Vaid, the region’s police chief.

A police statement said the dead included a 35-year-old man and his 32-year-old wife, and three of their children – two young boys and a teenage boy. Two of the couple’s daughters, one 7 and the other 12, were among the injured.

Residents said the family had gathered in their kitchen for breakfast when a shell hit their home.

Vaid said authoritie­s were evacuating civilians from the area amid shelling and firing.

India’s army said its soldiers were responding to what it called an unprovoked violation of the 2003 cease-fire agreement between the two countries.

Authoritie­s in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir said at least six civilians, including five women, were wounded in the Indian firing and shelling along the frontier.

Farooq Haider Khan, prime minister of the Pakistani-controlled part of Kashmir, condemned Indian shelling of border villages and visited a hospital to meet injured residents, an official statement said.

As in the past, each country blamed the other for starting the firing, insisting they were only retaliatin­g.

The violence comes amid heightened diplomatic tensions between New Delhi and Islamabad, who have accused each other of harassing their diplomatic staff in the two capitals.

This year, soldiers from the two nations have also been engaged in fierce border skirmishes along the rugged and mountainou­s line of control, as well as a lower-altitude 200km boundary separating India-controlled Kashmir and the Pakistani province of Punjab.

India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars since 1947 over their competing claims to the region.

Many see the fighting as part of what’s become a predictabl­e cycle of violence, as the region convulses with decades-old animositie­s between India and Pakistan over Kashmir, where rebel groups demand that the territory be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independen­t country.

A flare-up early this year similarly sent thousands to temporary shelters for days. India accuses Pakistan of arming and training anti-India rebels and also helping them by providing gunfire as cover for incursions. –

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