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Pakistani troops killed by Indian shelling in Kashmir, says military Pakistani troops killed by Indian shelling in Kashmir, says military
(35 minutes later)
Seven Pakistani soldiers have been killed by Indian shelling across the frontier in the disputed Kashmir region, Pakistan’s military has said. Pakistan says seven of its soldiers have been killed by Indian firing on the frontline of the contested Himalayan region of Kashmir.
The military media wing, ISPR, said in a statement on Monday that the soldiers were killed overnight in the Bhimber sector on the line of control - the de facto border in Pakistan-administered Kashmir. The incident happened in the Bhimber sector of the line of control, a brief statement by Pakistan’s army said. “Pakistani troops, while responding to Indian unprovoked firing, targeted Indian posts effectively,” it added.
Relations between the two nuclear-armed neighbours have been strained for several months, while cross-frontier shelling has intensified in recent weeks. Pakistan’s foreign office condemned what it described as “continuous unprovoked” firing and said the army was responding in a “befitting manner”.
More details soon The LOC is the ceasefire line between the two countries, which have fought three conflicts over Kashmir, a Muslim majority state that joined India after the partition of the subcontinent in 1947. The two nuclear armed neighbours are embroiled in an increasingly acrimonious diplomatic standoff.
Pakistan has lodged several complaints with India over what it says is the targeting of civilians living on its side of the LOC. It has said at least 25 people have been killed in recent weeks.
Tensions have been stoked following two attacks this year on Indian military bases, which New Delhi blames on Pakistan-based militant groups that it claims receives clandestine state support.
The first attack, on the Pathankot airbase in Indian Punjab, took place in January shortly after hopes for peace in south Asia had been stoked by the surprise visit of the Indian prime minister to Lahore on Christmas Day.
Nineteen soldiers died during the second assault on a base near the town of Uri in Indian Kashmir in September.
India responded with an unprecedented series of raids across the LOC, which it described as “surgical strikes” against “terrorist launch pads”, although Pakistan vigorously denied the claim.
Relations have been further tested by the widespread civilian unrest in India’s half of Kashmir following the killing by security forces of a popular militant commander in July.
Pakistan has criticised India’s attempts to impose order on Kashmir, which has resulted in scores of casualties among protesters.
This month Islamabad named eight Indian diplomats who it accused of spying.
Earlier, Delhi announced the expulsion of a Pakistani diplomat it said was running a spy ring.