Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

5 Indian officers killed in Kashmir, days after worst militant attack in decades

- niha masih, Joanna BY slater (c) 2019, The Washington Post, Feb 18, 2019 -

SRINAGAR, India - Five security personnel were killed in an encounter with militants in Indianadmi­nistered Kashmir on Monday, deepening concerns that the territory is entering a new cycle of violence days after a suicide bomber carried out the deadliest attack in decades.

That attack, which killed 40 paramilita­ry officers, prompted promises of retaliatio­n by India and a renewal of tensions with Pakistan. A Pakistan-based militant group called Jaish-e-muhammad, or Army of Muhammad, claimed responsibi­lity for the Thursday attack.

Early Monday, Indian security forces engaged in a multi-hour gun battle with militants in the district of Pulwama, the same area where Thursday’s attack took place.

Four soldiers and a police officer were killed, along with three militants and one civilian. The militants targeted were members of Jaish-e-muhammad and one was a Pakistani citizen, said Dilbag Singh, the state police chief. One of the senior-most police officers in Kashmir was also shot in the leg in the encounter, which lasted until Monday evening.

India holds Pakistan responsibl­e for the attacks on its security personnel. It accuses Pakistani intelligen­ce services of providing safe haven and material support to groups such as Jaish-e-muhammad, something Pakistan denies.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is running for reelection this spring, and public pressure for a military response is running high. But experts say that raids or airstrikes in Pakistani territory risk an unpredicta­ble escalation and may not ultimately deter militants.

In Kashmir, last week’s attack could mark the start of a new phase of violence. Militants have waged an insurgency against Indian rule for three decades in Kashmir, seeking either to claim independen­ce or join Pakistan. Both India and Pakistan claim the Himalayan region, which is divided by a heavily militarize­d frontier.

The Thursday attack highlighte­d the increasing pull of the militancy on local youth. Adil Ahmad Dar, an 18-year old who grew up in a village six miles from the site of the attack, drove a sport-utility vehicle loaded with explosives into a security convoy travelling toward the nearby city of Srinagar.

That combinatio­n of tactics - a suicide attacker, a massive car bomb - is rare in Kashmir, where militants have tended to carry out operations using firearms and grenades. Security officials are apprehensi­ve that the attack marks a potentiall­y perilous turn in the strategies adopted by militants.

D.S. Hooda, a general who commanded the Indian army forces in Kashmir until his retirement in 2016, said he hoped that last week’s attack was not the start of a trend. Security forces will have to exercise vigilance in keeping track of explosives, he said, and improve intelligen­ce gathering. But “it’s very, very difficult to try to counter somebody who wants to carry out a suicide attack.”

 ??  ?? D.S. Hooda, a general who commanded the Indian army forces in Kashmir until his retirement in 2016, said he hoped that last week’s attack was not the start of a trend
D.S. Hooda, a general who commanded the Indian army forces in Kashmir until his retirement in 2016, said he hoped that last week’s attack was not the start of a trend

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