AP, Srinagar :
Indian and Pakistani troops traded heavy gunfire and mortar rounds for a seventh day Sunday along the highly militarized line of control dividing the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir between the two archrivals, officials said.
Indian army spokesman Lt. Col. Manish Mehta said Pakistani troops fired on Indian positions Sunday in Balakote and Poonch sectors. Indian police officer Danish Rana said six civilians have died in the Pakistani shelling over the last two days. At least 17 others were wounded.
Pakistan’s army said in a statement that two civilians had been killed and two others wounded in the fighting.
The fighting follows a familiar pattern, with each side blaming the other. Both sides used terms like “unprovoked firing” and “befitting reply” to describe the actions of the other, and detail their own response.
Despite a 2003 ceasefire the two neighbors regularly trade fire, the latest coming as India celebrated Independence Day on Saturday. Pakistan observed it a day earlier.
Indian and Pakistani troops traded heavy gunfire and mortar rounds for a seventh day Sunday along the highly militarized line of control dividing the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir between the two archrivals, officials said.
Indian army spokesman Lt. Col. Manish Mehta said Pakistani troops fired on Indian positions Sunday in Balakote and Poonch sectors. Indian police officer Danish Rana said six civilians have died in the Pakistani shelling over the last two days. At least 17 others were wounded.
Pakistan’s army said in a statement that two civilians had been killed and two others wounded in the fighting.
The fighting follows a familiar pattern, with each side blaming the other. Both sides used terms like “unprovoked firing” and “befitting reply” to describe the actions of the other, and detail their own response.
Despite a 2003 ceasefire the two neighbors regularly trade fire, the latest coming as India celebrated Independence Day on Saturday. Pakistan observed it a day earlier.