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		India's PM Modi warns Pakistan of strong 
		response to Kashmir attack 
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		 [February 15, 2019] 
		By Fayaz Bukhari and Sanjeev Miglani 
 NEW DELHI/SRINAGAR (Reuters) - India's 
		Prime Minister Narendra Modi warned Pakistan on Friday to expect a 
		strong response to a bomb attack in the disputed region of Kashmir that 
		killed 44 paramilitary policemen, ratcheting up tension between the 
		nuclear-armed neighbors.
 
 The car bomb attack on a security convoy on Thursday was the worst in 
		decades of insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir, India's only Muslim majority 
		state.
 
 (Graphic: Suicide car bomber kills 44 policemen in Kashmir - https://tmsnrt.rs/2TM34k8)
 
 "We will give a befitting reply, our neighbor will not be allowed to 
		de-stabilize us," Modi said in a speech, after meeting security advisers 
		to discuss options.
 
 The attack comes months before an Indian general election.
 
 The Pakistan-based Islamist militant group Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) 
		claimed responsibility soon after a suicide bomber rammed a 
		explosives-laden car into a bus carrying police personnel.
 
		
		 
		
 India has for years accused Muslim Pakistan of backing separatist 
		militants in divided Kashmir, which the neighbors both claim in full but 
		rule in part.
 
 Pakistan denies that, saying it only offers political support to the 
		Himalayan region's suppressed Muslim people.
 
 The White House urged Pakistan in a statement "to end immediately the 
		support and safe haven provided to all terrorist groups operating on its 
		soil".
 
 India said it had "incontrovertible evidence" of Pakistani involvement 
		in the attack. The Pakistan government responded with a stiff denial, 
		calling the attack a matter of "grave concern."
 
 As outrage and demands for revenge flooded Indian social media, Arun 
		Jaitley, one of the most senior figures in the Hindu nationalist-led 
		government, told reporters India would work to ensure the "complete 
		isolation" of Pakistan.
 
 The first step, he said, would include removing most favored nation (MFN) 
		trade privileges that had been accorded to Pakistan - though annual 
		bilateral trade between the countries is barely $2 billion.
 
 The last major attack in Kashmir was in 2016 when Jaish militants raided 
		an Indian army camp, killing 20 soldiers. Weeks later, Modi ordered a 
		surgical strike on suspected militant camps across the border in 
		Pakistan Kashmir.
 
 When he swept to power in 2014, Modi vowed to pursue a tough line with 
		mostly Pakistan. The two countries have gone to war three times since 
		independence from Britain in 1947, twice over Kashmir.
 
 The Line of Control, the de facto border dividing Indian- and 
		Pakistani-held Kashmir, is widely regarded as one of the world's most 
		dangerous flashpoints, especially after the two countries became nuclear 
		armed states in 1998.
 
 CALLS FOR REVENGE
 
 Indian Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale summoned Pakistan's ambassador, 
		Sohail Mahmood, and issued a demarche demanding Pakistan take verifiable 
		action against the Jaish.
 
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			India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks with the media inside 
			the parliament premises on the first day of the winter session, in 
			New Delhi, India, December 11, 2018. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi/File Photo 
            
 
            Crowds gathered in Jammu, the Hindu-dominated part of Jammu and 
			Kashmir state, demanding stronger action against Pakistan.
 A curfew was briefly imposed in Jammu after crowds overturned and 
			set fire to some vehicles. Protesters were also marching to the 
			Pakistani embassy in New Delhi.
 
 The attack comes at a difficult time for Pakistan, which is 
			struggling to attract foreign investment and avert a payments 
			crisis, with its swiftly diminishing foreign currency reserves at 
			less than $8 billion, equivalent to two months of import payments.
 
 The escalating tension risks overshadowing a visit to the region by 
			the Saudi crown prince, who is due in Islamabad over the weekend and 
			New Delhi next week, with both governments hoping to attract Saudi 
			investment.
 
 India's Home Minister Rajnath Singh flew into Srinagar, the main 
			city in Indian Kashmir, and joined mourners carrying the coffins of 
			the dead policemen, before they were sent to their homes across 
			India.
 
 Hundreds of thousands of Indian troops are deployed in Kashmir.
 
 The separatist insurgency has waxed and waned since the late 1980s, 
			but began to pick up in the last five years as a fresh generation of 
			Kashmiris was drawn to militancy.
 
 Soon after Thursday's attack, Jaish released photographs and a video 
			of a young Kashmiri villager, Adil Ahmad Dar, who it said had 
			carried out the suicide attack on the convoy.
 
 In the video, Dar warned of more attacks to avenge human rights 
			violations in Kashmir. On Friday, hundreds of people gathered at his 
			village of Lethipora to mourn his death.
 
 Jaish is one of the most deadly groups operating in Kashmir.
 
            
			 
			In 2001, it mounted an attack on the parliament in New Delhi that 
			brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war.
 Indian efforts to add Jaish leader Masood Azhar to a U.N. Security 
			Council blacklist of al Qaeda-linked terrorists have been blocked by 
			China.
 
 Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang expressed “deep 
			shock” at the latest attack.
 
 China resolutely opposed and strongly condemned all terrorism and 
			hoped “relevant countries in the region” could cooperate to combat 
			the threat, he told reporters.
 
 (Additional reporting by Manoj Kumar and Neha Dasgupta; Editing by 
			Simon Cameron-Moore, Robert Birsel)
 
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