Showing posts with label India-Pakistan tension. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India-Pakistan tension. Show all posts

Friday, October 11, 2013

Pak violates ceasefire again, several Indian Army posts targeted in J&K

Jammu: The Pakistani army violated the ceasefire yet again today, targeting several Indian Army posts in Jammu and Kashmir.

According to reports, heavy firing was reported from the Hamirpur, Mendhar and Barasingha sectors of Poonch in Jammu.

Small arms, rockets and mortars are reportedly being fired from Pakistan. The Indian Army is retaliating in equal measure, said officials.

This comes days after the army's encounter at the Keran sector 100 km from Srinagar, the largest in years, comprising a series of gunbattles in which soldiers fought about 30 heavily-armed Pakistanis who crossed over the Line of Control for 14 days.

India has accused the Pakistani army of links to the group. Five Indian soldiers were injured.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

India says it has killed seven in clashes along Pakistan border


Indian troops display arms and ammunition captured from suspected militants after a gun battle in the Keran sector at the Line of control (LOC) in Srinagar
New Delhi: India says it has killed seven fighters and is still fighting others in a Pakistan-backed force of several dozen who crossed a mountainous and thickly forested border area with the aim of killing Indian troops, ratcheting up tensions just as the two countries' leaders agreed to work together to de-escalate the situation.

Indian troops and the "infiltrators" were facing off at a distance of around 600 yards, engaged in "controlled firing," Naresh Vijay Vig, a spokesman for the Indian army, said Monday. He said five Indian soldiers had been injured.

Indian officials say the exchange of fire began two weeks ago, when the fighters were spotted in an abandoned village, Shalbhato, and prevented from advancing farther into Indian territory. Indian troops killed the seven fighters and seized a large cache of arms, including six AK-47s, 10 pistols, four grenade launchers and four rocket launchers, an army spokesman said Friday.

"They have been stopped," an army general, Bikram Singh, told reporters in New Delhi. "Some of them have been neutralized. An operation is on to flush them out." India's Defense Ministry described the episode as a "Border Action Team" maneuver, a reference to a unit of Pakistan's army.

A Pakistani military spokesman denied any involvement.

"No such thing happened at all," the official said, in comments to the Press Trust of India. "This is a blatant lie. We totally deny this baseless allegation."

The flare-up began just as the prime ministers of Pakistan and India met in an effort to de-escalate the tensions, agreeing that senior military commanders should meet to find ways to uphold the 2003 cease-fire along the so-called line of control. It is considered a crucial step toward peace between the two nuclear-armed neighbors.

Though both countries are still formally observing the cease-fire, violence has risen on the border in recent months. In September, three heavily armed militants crossed the Indian border and attacked a police station and an army camp, killing 12 people before Indian troops killed them. That came after the killing of five Indian soldiers at the border and the gruesome discovery in January of the bodies of two Indian soldiers, one of whom was found beheaded. Pakistan also claims that Indian soldiers killed Pakistani troops.

The village of Shalbhato has been empty since the early 1990s, when it was the scene of fierce fighting and most of its residents moved to Pakistan, according to Indian news reports. India then built a border fence along the line of control, which skirts Shalbhato, leaving the abandoned village on the Pakistani side of the fence, though it is in Indian territory.