5 Indian officers among 7 killed in Jammu-Kashmir gun battles

5 Indian officers among 7 killed in Jammu-Kashmir gun battles

At least 5 Indian officers and two suspected rebels have been killed in separate gun battles this week in India’s Jammu and Kashmir area, native officers confirmed Thursday.

Earlier Wednesday, two Indian military officers and a senior policeman finishing up a safety sweep in a forested space of the southern Kashmir valley have been ambushed and killed, with the 2 suspected gunmen holed up and firing at troopers encircling their place.

India’s Kashmir police mentioned their power had surrounded two alleged members of the Lashkar-e-Taiba militant group.

“Our forces persist with unwavering resolve,” police posted on X, previously often known as Twitter.

Four individuals have been killed Tuesday – an Indian soldier, a police officer and two suspected rebels – throughout a protracted firefight within the mountainous Rajouri space.

Gunmen first shot useless a military sniffer canine that had led the troopers to the militants.

Kashmir, a Muslim-majority Himalayan area, is held by India and Pakistan in components and claimed by each in full. A small sliver of Kashmir can be held by China.

Since they have been partitioned in 1947, the Pakistan and India have fought three wars – in 1948, 1965 and 1971. Two of them have been over Kashmir.

Also, within the Siachen glacier area in northern Kashmir, troops from each nations have fought intermittently since 1984. A cease-fire got here into impact in 2003.

For a long time, an insurgency searching for independence or a merger with Pakistan – and army operations to crush that motion – have seen tens of 1000’s of civilians, troopers and rebels killed.

But the frequency of clashes steadily decreased since 2019 when Hindu nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s authorities cancelled the partial autonomy of the area and imposed direct rule on Indian-controlled Kashmir.

Nearly 900 individuals, together with not less than 144 safety forces personnel, have died in violence since then.

India’s prime courtroom is presently weighing if the snap determination – that triggered a drastic curtailment of civil liberties and press freedom – was constitutionally legitimate.

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