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At least 13 killed as India-Pakistan tensions flare in Kashmir

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Indian and Pakistani forces on Friday waged their biggest artillery battle of the past year, leaving more than 13 dead and dozens wounded on both sides of their disputed Kashmir frontier, officials said.

Artillery and machine gun clashes were reported all along the 740-kilometre (460-mile) ceasefire line that has separated the nuclear-armed rivals for the past seven decades, officials from the two sides said.

Hundreds of villagers were moved away from the so-called Line of Control (LoC) in Indian-controlled territory, while Pakistani officials said dozens of homes were set ablaze by Indian shelling on their side.

The new peak in tensions came only five days after three Indian soldiers and three militants were killed in an exchange along the LoC.

India is also involved in a border showdown with the Chinese army in the Himalayas.

The latest fighting erupted early Friday, with the two sides accusing each other of launching "unprovoked" assaults, and shells were still being fired into the night, residents said.

"Pakistan used mortars and other weapons" and "deliberately targeted civilian areas", said an Indian army statement.

Four Indian troops and four civilians, including an eight year-old boy, were killed, army and police spokesmen said. At least 12 security forces and civilians were wounded.

On the other side of the border, Raja Farooq Haider, senior minister in Pakistani Kashmir, said five people were killed and 31 wounded in the intense shelling on the Neelum and Jhelum valleys.

The Pakistani military confirmed one of the dead was a soldier.

A Pakistani Kashmiri carries an injured child at a hospital following deadly cross-border shelling b...
A Pakistani Kashmiri carries an injured child at a hospital following deadly cross-border shelling between Pakistani and Indian forces
-, AFP

"For how long (do) we have to bear such colossal losses?" he said in a Twitter message directed at Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan.

Indian officers said the fighting was sparked when militants tried to cross into Indian-controlled territory at the northern end of the LoC.

Indian troops "retaliated strongly, causing substantial damage to the Pakistan army's infrastructure and casualties," said the military statement, adding that ammunition dumps and forward bases had been hit.

- Flashpoint -

A bridge at the Line of Control between India and Pakistan  seen from Tithwal village in the Kupwara...
A bridge at the Line of Control between India and Pakistan, seen from Tithwal village in the Kupwara district
Money SHARMA, AFP/File

The two sides regularly stage artillery duels across the LoC, and invariably blame each other.

Kashmir has been divided between the two countries since their angry separation in 1947. It has been a cause of two of their three wars since then.

Both countries claim the whole of the Himalayan region, where India is also fighting an insurgency that has left tens of thousands dead since 1989.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was to visit troops in a border area on Saturday for Diwali, the biggest Hindu holiday of the year, according to media reports.

Modi, who portrays himself as tough on security, has spent every Diwali with the military since becoming the country's leader in 2014.

Modi launched what he called "surgical strikes" inside Pakistani Kashmir in 2016 after militants attacked an Indian base, killing 19 soldiers.

The neighbours staged air strikes against each other last year after a suicide bomb attack in which 40 Indian troops were killed.

Indian and Pakistani forces on Friday waged their biggest artillery battle of the past year, leaving more than 13 dead and dozens wounded on both sides of their disputed Kashmir frontier, officials said.

Artillery and machine gun clashes were reported all along the 740-kilometre (460-mile) ceasefire line that has separated the nuclear-armed rivals for the past seven decades, officials from the two sides said.

Hundreds of villagers were moved away from the so-called Line of Control (LoC) in Indian-controlled territory, while Pakistani officials said dozens of homes were set ablaze by Indian shelling on their side.

The new peak in tensions came only five days after three Indian soldiers and three militants were killed in an exchange along the LoC.

India is also involved in a border showdown with the Chinese army in the Himalayas.

The latest fighting erupted early Friday, with the two sides accusing each other of launching “unprovoked” assaults, and shells were still being fired into the night, residents said.

“Pakistan used mortars and other weapons” and “deliberately targeted civilian areas”, said an Indian army statement.

Four Indian troops and four civilians, including an eight year-old boy, were killed, army and police spokesmen said. At least 12 security forces and civilians were wounded.

On the other side of the border, Raja Farooq Haider, senior minister in Pakistani Kashmir, said five people were killed and 31 wounded in the intense shelling on the Neelum and Jhelum valleys.

The Pakistani military confirmed one of the dead was a soldier.

A Pakistani Kashmiri carries an injured child at a hospital following deadly cross-border shelling b...

A Pakistani Kashmiri carries an injured child at a hospital following deadly cross-border shelling between Pakistani and Indian forces
-, AFP

“For how long (do) we have to bear such colossal losses?” he said in a Twitter message directed at Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan.

Indian officers said the fighting was sparked when militants tried to cross into Indian-controlled territory at the northern end of the LoC.

Indian troops “retaliated strongly, causing substantial damage to the Pakistan army’s infrastructure and casualties,” said the military statement, adding that ammunition dumps and forward bases had been hit.

– Flashpoint –

A bridge at the Line of Control between India and Pakistan  seen from Tithwal village in the Kupwara...

A bridge at the Line of Control between India and Pakistan, seen from Tithwal village in the Kupwara district
Money SHARMA, AFP/File

The two sides regularly stage artillery duels across the LoC, and invariably blame each other.

Kashmir has been divided between the two countries since their angry separation in 1947. It has been a cause of two of their three wars since then.

Both countries claim the whole of the Himalayan region, where India is also fighting an insurgency that has left tens of thousands dead since 1989.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was to visit troops in a border area on Saturday for Diwali, the biggest Hindu holiday of the year, according to media reports.

Modi, who portrays himself as tough on security, has spent every Diwali with the military since becoming the country’s leader in 2014.

Modi launched what he called “surgical strikes” inside Pakistani Kashmir in 2016 after militants attacked an Indian base, killing 19 soldiers.

The neighbours staged air strikes against each other last year after a suicide bomb attack in which 40 Indian troops were killed.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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