Five Indian soldiers among seven killed in Kashmir gun battles
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[October 11, 2021]
By Fayaz Bukhari
SRINAGAR, India (Reuters) - At least five
Indian soldiers and two militants were killed on Monday in a series of
gun battles in Indian Kashmir, where security forces have stepped up
operations after several civilian killings last week, officials said.
In the deadliest incident for the country's security forces in the
Himalayan region this year, a military official said five soldiers died
after a shootout with suspected militants near the border with Pakistan.
"They were moved to a nearby medical facility but succumbed to their
injuries," spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Davinder Anand said.
Claimed in full by both India and Pakistan but only controlled in parts
by the neighbouring countries, Kashmir has been the site of a bloody
insurrection against New Delhi since the 1990s.
India says Pakistan supports the militancy in Kashmir. Islamabad denies
this, saying it only provides diplomatic and moral support to the
Kashmiri people.
The Muslim-majority region has been on the edge since the killing of
three Hindus and a Sikh by suspected militants last week which triggered
a crackdown by Indian authorities.
In north Kashmir, security forces shot dead a suspected militant from
The Resistance Front (TRF), which Indian police believe is the
Pakistan-backed group behind the series of civilian assassinations.
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Officials work at a polling station during the parliamentary
election, in Baghdad, Iraq, October 10, 2021. REUTERS/Thaier al-Sudani
The militant was a suspect in the killing of a
civilian driver and security forces had been looking for him after
arresting four of his associates on Sunday, the Kashmir valley's
police chief Vijay Kumar said.
"He was shot dead this morning," Kumar said.
In a separate incident, another militant was killed in a gun battle
in south Kashmir, added Kumar.
There has been an uptick in infiltration attempts by militants from
Pakistan, which in February agreed to observe a ceasefire with India
along the border in Kashmir, Indian army chief General Manoj Mukund
Naravane said on Saturday.
"Over the last month or so, we again see renewed attempts at
infiltration," Naravane told the India Today news channel. "We have
eliminated two or three such infiltration attempts."
(Writing by Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Raju
Gopalakrishnan)
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