The Edition
facebook icon twitter icon instagram icon linkedin icon

Latest

Indian shelling kills four civilians in Pakistan: officials

27 February 2019, MVT 13:06
Auto-rickshaw drivers read newspapers, with front page reports on the Indian air strikes against militant camps in Pakistan's territory, in Mumbai on February 27, 2019. - India wants to avoid any "further escalation of the situation" after conducting "pre-emptive" air strikes against militant camps in Pakistani territory, foreign minister Sushma Swaraj said on February 27. The incursion across the ceasefire line that divides Kashmir came after New Delhi threatened retaliation over the February 14 suicide bombing that killed 40 Indian troops, and was claimed by the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) group. (Photo by Indranil MUKHERJEE / AFP)
27 February 2019, MVT 13:06

Four people including two children were killed and ten others injured in an exchange of fire between Indian and Pakistani troops in Kashmir Tuesday, Pakistani officials said, as tensions surge between the nuclear-armed rivals.

"An Indian mortar shell hit a house in Nakyal sector along the Line of Control that killed a mother, daughter and son while three others were injured," local disaster management authority official Shariq Tariq told AFP.

New Delhi and Islamabad regularly accuse each other of firing across the heavily-militarised de facto border in Kashmir, called the Line of Control.

Tariq said another woman was killed and seven others injured in shelling elsewhere in Nakyal. Local police official Irfan Saleem confirmed the incident.

The deaths came as India said Tuesday it had launched air strikes against militant camps in Pakistan's territory, following a suicide attack that killed 40 Indian soldiers in Kashmir earlier this month.

Pakistan denied India's claim that the attack had inflicted major damage and casualties on militants responsible for the February 14 bombing as "reckless and fictitious", and said it would respond in due course.

The purported attack would be India's first use of air strikes against Pakistan since 1971, when the two went to war over Bangladesh's independence.

The incursion across the ceasefire line that divides Kashmir came after India threatened retaliation over the suicide bombing this month that was claimed by the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) group.

The escalation has triggered international alarm, with China and the European Union calling for both sides to show restraint.

Kashmir has been divided between Pakistan and India since the end of British colonial rule over the subcontinent in 1947. Both sides claim the territory in full.

Firing across the Line of Control has killed and wounded dozens of soldiers and civilians on both sides in recent years.

Share this story

Related Stories

Discuss

MORE ON WORLD