Baltimore Sun

India, Pakistan trade fire in Kashmir; 9 dead

- By Joanna Slater

NEW DELHI — India and Pakistan exchanged fire across the line dividing the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir on Saturday and Sunday, killing nine civilians and soldiers, according to authoritie­s in both countries.

It was one of the deadliest sequences this year at the Line of Control, the highly militarize­d frontier where soldiers from the two countries regularly trade small-arms and fire.

The barrage came amid increased tension between the nuclear-armed rivals.

In August, India withdrew Kashmir’s semiautono­mous status, shut down communicat­ions in the region and detained thousands of people. The moves incensed Pakistan, which considers itself the defender of Kashmiri Muslims.

India accuses Pakistan of stoking a three-decade insurgency against Indian rule in Kashmir by sending

artillery fighters and arms across the Line of Control. Pakistan denies the accusation­s.

Five civilians and one soldier were killed on Pakistan’s side of the Line of Control, a spokesman for the Pakistani army said Sunday. Two Indian soldiers and one civilian were also killed, a spokesman for the Indian Defense Ministry said.

Gen. Bipin Rawat of the Indian Army told reporters the exchange began when militants attempted to cross into Indian-controlled territory. Pakistan rejected the accusation­s and said India’s firing was “indiscrimi­nate and unprovoked.”

Exchanges of fire across the Line of Control have increased in recent years, an ongoing confrontat­ion that some analysts have called a “war by other means.”

The t wo countries reached a cease-fire agreement in 2003, and for several years, relative calm prevailed on the de facto frontier in Kashmir. Since 2014, however, cease-fire violations have jumped.

 ?? SAJJAD QAYYUM/GETTY-AFP ?? A man stands in front of his damaged house after shelling in a village in Pakistan-administer­ed Kashmir.
SAJJAD QAYYUM/GETTY-AFP A man stands in front of his damaged house after shelling in a village in Pakistan-administer­ed Kashmir.

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