Dayton Daily News

Kashmir fighting escalates between India, Pakistan

- By Aijaz Hussain and Roshan Mughal

SRINAGAR, INDIA — Indian and Pakistani troops traded fire Saturday along their volatile frontier in Kashmir, killing at least five civilians and a soldier in the latest escalation of violence in the disputed region.

The deaths on both sides of the border came as the nuclear-armed rivals exchanged blame for initiating the hostilitie­s, which have involved the shelling of villages and border posts and are in violation of a 2003 cease-fire accord.

Saturday’s fighting is the fourth straight day of deadly confrontat­ion between the neighbors, with six civilians and three soldiers killed in previous days.

India and Pakistan have a long history of bitter relations over Kashmir, a Himalayan territory claimed by both in its entirety. They have fought two of their three wars over the region since they gained independen­ce from British colonial rule in 1947.

Indian police said Pakistani soldiers were targeting Indian border posts and villages with mortar shells and automatic gunfire Saturday in Jammu region. Three civilians, one a teenage boy, were killed Saturday in Indian-controlled Kashmir and at least 16 civilians and two soldiers were wounded.

An Indian army soldier was killed Saturday in Poonch sector along the de facto frontier where Indian and Pakistani soldiers were trading gunfire and mortar shells, said Col. Nitin Joshi, an Indian army spokesman.

Pakistani officials blamed India for killing two civilians and wounding four others along the frontier.

Both countries have accused the other of initiating past border skirmishes and causing civilian and military casualties.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry on Saturday summoned the deputy Indian High Commission­er to lodge a protest over what it called unprovoked cease-fire violations by Indian troops.

A statement from the ministry said four civilians were killed and 20 others wounded by Indian fire Thursday and Friday.

Most of the recent fighting is taking place along a somewhat-defined frontier where each country has a separate paramilita­ry border force guarding the lower-altitude 125-mile boundary separating Indian-controlled Kashmir and the Pakistani province of Punjab.

Late Friday, it escalated to the contentiou­s frontier that includes a 460-mile rugged and mountainou­s stretch called the Line of Control that is guarded by the armies of India and Pakistan.

On Friday, the two countries summoned each other’s senior diplomats in their capitals to register their anger and protest over what both call unprovoked cease-fire violations. They also issued statements condemning the violence.

Schools in frontier villages have been closed on the Indian side, and authoritie­s advised residents to stay indoors as shells and bullets rained down.

Indian authoritie­s have also deployed bulletproo­f vehicles to evacuate people who were injured and sick. Bullets and shrapnel scarred homes and walls amid the intense firing and shelling.

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