Saturday Star

Pakistan denies India’s surgical strikes claim

New Delhi’s ‘exaggerate­d’ version of events ridiculed

- ASAD HASHIM AND FAYAZ BUKHARI

PAKISTAN yesterday “completely rejected” India’s claim to have sent troops across its disputed border in Kashmir to kill suspected militants, as India evacuated villages near the frontier amid concerns about a military escalation.

In a rare public announceme­nt of such a raid, India on Thursday said it had carried out “surgical strikes”, sending special forces to kill men preparing to sneak into its territory and attack major cities.

Indian officials said troops had killed militants numbering in the double digits and that its soldiers had returned safely to base before dawn, but declined to provide more evidence on the operation.

Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif maintained that India fired from its side of the heavily militarise­d frontier in the disputed region of Kashmir, the flashpoint for two of three wars between the nu- clear-armed neighbours, and killed two soldiers.

“The cabinet joined the PM in completely rejecting the Indian claims of carrying out ‘surgical strikes’,” Sharif ’s office said.

Domestic pressure had been building on Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to retaliate after 19 soldiers were killed in a September 18 attack on an Indian army base in Kashmir that India blames on infiltrato­rs who crossed from Pakistani territory.

A senior leader of Modi’s ruling party declared himself satisfied with India’s “multiprong­ed” response to the attack on the army base. “For Pakistan, terrorism has come as a cheaper option all these years. Time to make it costly for it,” Ram Madhav, national general secretary of the Bharatiya Janata Party, wrote in a column for the Indian Express newspaper.

While India’s public and politician­s have welcomed the operation, Pakistan greeted New Delhi’s version of events with scepticism and ridicule. TV news channels and newspapers reported only small arms and mortar fire, a relatively routine occurrence on the de facto border.

Pakistan’s Express Tribune, an affiliate of The New York Times, led its edition with the headline, “Surgical farce blows up in India’s face”.

India’s announceme­nt on Thursday has raised the possibilit­y of military escalation between the rivals that could wreck a 2003 Kashmir ceasefire.

India evacuated more than 10 000 villagers living near the border, and ordered security forces to upgrade surveillan­ce along the frontier in Jammu and Kashmir state.

“Our top priority is to move women and children to government buildings, guest houses and marriage halls,” said Nirmal Singh, deputy chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir.

Modi’s gover nment has been struggling to contain protests on the streets of Kashmir where more than 80 civilians have been killed and thousands wounded in the past 10 weeks after a young separatist militant was killed by Indian forces.

Pakistan said yesterday that Sharif ’s special envoys had arrived in Beijing to brief China on the deteriorat­ing situation in Indian-controlled Kashmir. China, a Pakistan ally, expressed its concern, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said.

Farmer Rakesh Singh, 56, who lives in the Arnia sector of Jammu, said his family were among the first to leave because his village was within range of Pakistan’s artillery.

“We suffer the most. It is nothing new to us” he said. – Reuters

 ??  ?? India’s premier Narendra Modi, right, with his Pakistani counterpar­t Nawaz Sharif in 2014. Relations between the two countries have sunk to a new low.
India’s premier Narendra Modi, right, with his Pakistani counterpar­t Nawaz Sharif in 2014. Relations between the two countries have sunk to a new low.

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