San Francisco Chronicle

Tensions escalate along frontier

- By Aijaz Hussain and Munir Ahmed Aijaz Hussain and Munir Ahmed are Associated Press writers.

SRINAGAR, India — 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.

The fighting is taking place along a some what defined frontier where each country has a separate paramilita­ry border force guarding the lower altitude 125-mile boundary separating Indiancont­rolled Kashmir and the Pakistani province of Punjab.

The contentiou­s frontier also includes a 460mile rugged and mountainou­s stretch called the Line of Control that is guarded by the armies of India and Pakistan.

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