More than 10 dead after India-Pakistan Kashmir clash
 
 
Indian and Pakistani forces on Friday waged their
biggest artillery battle in several months leaving more than 10 dead and dozens
wounded either side of their disputed Kashmir frontier, officials said.
At least five separate clashes -- involving shelling
and gunfire -- were reported 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 on Friday morning and
shells were still being fired into the night, according to residents.
The two sides each accused the other of launching
"unprovoked" attacks.
"Pakistan used mortars and other weapons"
and "deliberately targeted civilian areas", said an Indian army
statement.
Three Indian soldiers were killed and three wounded
in the Keran sector of the frontier. Kashmir police said three civilians were
killed and at least three suffered serious injuries, with one man losing both
legs.
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.
"For how long we have to bear such colossal
losses?" he said in a Twitter message directed at Pakistan Prime Minister
Imran Khan.
A senior local official in Neelum, Raja Shahid
Mehmood, confirmed the casualties and said the shelling was continuing late
Friday.
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.
The two sides regularly stage artillery duels across
the LoC, and invariably blame each other for the clashes.
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 more than 45 Indian troops were
killed.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


