Five Indian soldiers killed in Indian-held Kashmir

Published July 17, 2024
Srinagar: Kashmiris take part in a boat  procession in the Dal lake on the ninth day of Muharram, on Tuesday.—AFP
Srinagar: Kashmiris take part in a boat procession in the Dal lake on the ninth day of Muharram, on Tuesday.—AFP

SRINAGAR: Five Indian soldiers were killed in a firefight in Indian-held Kashmir on Monday. The clash brings the number of soldiers and police killed this year to 17.

Indian officials say Kashmiri fighters had made a “tactical shift” in attacks by moving operations from the mainly Muslim Srinagar valley to the Hindu-dominated southern Jammu area, where “counterinsurgency measures are not as strong”.

The Indian army’s 16 Corps said forces had launched an operation in the Doda forest on Monday evening, some 135 kilometres southeast of Srinagar, in the Jammu area. A “heavy firefight ensued”, the army said, saying four men were killed, including a captain.

Clash brings the number of soldiers and police killed this year in the held territory to 17

A police officer also died of his wounds and two soldiers had been hospitalised.

Indian army chief Upendra Dwivedi sent his “deepest condolences” to the families of the men. Reinforcements were deployed to track the `gunmen’ in the forested mountains, an Indian official said.

This year, 61 people have been killed in Indian-held Kashmir — 17 civilians, 17 soldiers and 27 Kashmiri fighters, according to the New Delhi-based South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP).

That compares to 132 people killed last year — 12 civilians, 33 soldiers and 87 Kashmiris, according to SATP data.

This year, almost all the Indian soldiers killed were in Jammu, while last year almost all were killed in the Srinagar valley.

Monday’s clash came a day after the Indian army said it killed three fighters as they allegedly tried to cross the Line of Control in Kupwara district.

Last month, nine Hindu pilgrims were killed and dozens wounded when an unidentified man opened fire on a bus carrying them from a shrine in the southern Reasi area.

It was one of the deadliest attacks in years and the first on Hindu pilgrims in occupied Kashmir since 2017, when seven people were killed in another ambush on a bus.

Published in Dawn, July 17th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Fragile stability
Updated 05 Sep, 2024

Fragile stability

The only way forward towards long-term economic stability lies in broadening tax revenue base, increasing and diversifying exports, and attracting FDI.
Baloch voices
05 Sep, 2024

Baloch voices

AKHTAR Mengal, one of the most prominent voices from Balochistan in parliament, has nothing left to say. On Tuesday,...
Mpox alarm
05 Sep, 2024

Mpox alarm

PAKISTAN must take timely action before it ends up with a cluster of mpox cases. Our authorities would do well to...
Inflation decline
Updated 04 Sep, 2024

Inflation decline

In the given circumstances, the ‘victory statement’ against inflation by the prime minister is a little premature.
Political lawfare
04 Sep, 2024

Political lawfare

The govt should know that its proposed legislation is projecting desperation, not power.
Test meltdown
04 Sep, 2024

Test meltdown

Pakistan cricket is struggling and something must change radically — perhaps a complete overhaul of the existing system.