UPDATED ON:
Friday, June 01, 2007
15:29 Mecca time, 12:29 GMT
 
News CENTRAL/S. ASIA
Violence flares in Indian Kashmir
Fifteen soldiers were hospitalised after an Indian army bus was struck by an explosive device [AFP]
Suspected separatists have attacked a paramilitary camp, a police post and an army bus in Indian-controlled Kashmir in an upsurge in violence, killing three government soldiers and wounding another 22, police said.
A grenade attack at the paramilitary camp killed at least two soldiers in Nihama, a village 75km south of Srinagar, the capital of India's Jammu-Kashmir state, S P Pani, the chief of police, said on Friday.

Three soldiers critically wounded in the blast were taken to hospital, Pani said.

Prabhakar Tripathy, a spokesman for the Central Reserve Police Force, said: "We are verifying from where the grenade was lobbed."

 

Also on Friday, a police post at Sheeri, a village 70km north of Srinagar, was fired on killing one policeman and critically wounding another four, Viplav Kumar, a senior superintendent of police, said.

 

No one has claimed responsibility for the two attacks.

 

Bus attack

 
Several hours earlier, an improvised explosive device was triggered as an army bus passed by in a high-security zone in Srinagar, Sajjad Ahmed, a police officer, said. The 15 wounded soldiers were hospitalised, one in critical condition.

 

The Indian army said it shot dead four
suspected separatists on Thursday [AFP]
In a statement faxed to the local Kashmir News Service, Ahsan Illahi, spokesman for Hezb-ul-Mujahedeen, claimed his group's responsibility for the attack.

 

Meanwhile, the army said that troops shot dead four suspected separatists in two battles late on Thursday in Pulwama and Udhampur districts, in the south of the disputed region.

 

Hezb-ul-Mujahedeen is one of a dozen armed groups which have been fighting since 1989 for Kashmir's independence from India or its merger with Pakistan.

More than 68,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in the conflict.

 

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over control of Kashmir since they won independence from Britain in 1947.

 

The longtime rivals have been holding talks since 2004 to settle the Kashmir dispute, but without success so far.

 Source: Agencies
 
ARTICLE TOOLS
 Email Article  Email article
 Print Article  Print article
 Send Feedback  Send feedback
 Share article  Share article