• India says its troops made ‘surgical strike’ across LoC; Pakistan rejects claim
• DGMOs speak over the phone
• Delhi’s envoy summoned to FO
ISLAMABAD: The crisis in Pakistan and India over the events in held Kashmir dangerously escalated on Thursday after Indian forces fired across the Line of Control (LoC) in Azad Jammu and Kashmir killing at least two Pakistan Army soldiers while calling it surgical strikes against “terrorism launch pads”.
The claim was immediately dismissed by Pakistan, which said India mischaracterised cross-LoC firing as surgical strikes and made it clear that any such attempt would be responded strongly.
The events, which followed months of tensions over protests in India-held Kashmir and the Uri army camp attack earlier this month in which 18 Indian soldiers were killed, started around midnight Wednesday and continued till the early hours of Thursday morning according to the Indian side and about 8am as per the Pakistani officials.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had pledged punishment for the “perpetrators” soon after the Uri attack.
Unlike the past when both sides differed over who started the firing, this time the two had conflicting accounts of what happened.
The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the military’s media division, described it as a ceasefire violation by India.
The exchanges took place along most of the LoC — Iftikharabad (Cham Jorian), Bhimber, Hotspring, Kel (Dhundial) and Leppa sectors. According to Pakistan’s military officials, the fiercest clashes apparently occurred in Hotspring sector where Pakistan lost two of its soldiers, identified as Naik Imtiaz and Havildar Jumma Khan, and there were also reports of Indian casualties. “We responded befittingly to Indian firing. But we do not have any knowledge of the extent of casualties on the other side,” military spokesman Lt Gen Asim Bajwa told Dawn over the phone.
Indian Director General of Military Operations Lt Gen Ranbir Singh told a press conference in New Delhi that seven “terrorism launch pads” across the LoC were targeted after weeklong surveillance. “Significant casualties have been caused to these terrorists and those who are trying to support them,” claimed Lt Gen Singh.
Indian media quoted sources as having said that commandos from 2, 4 and 9 Parachute Regiments were airdropped near LoC from where they crossed over into the Pakistani side from Kupawara and Poonch districts that targeted “sanctuaries” situated one to three kilometres from the LoC.
The Indian army said the surgical strikes were aimed at neutralizing alleged militants who had “positioned themselves at launch pads with the aim to carry out strikes in Jammu and Kashmir and other metros.”
NDTV said there were no Indian casualties in the strikes.