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hotspot.
India
army chief threatens Pakistan over Kashmir killings
India's
army chief threatened to retaliate against Pakistan for the killing
of two soldiers in fighting near the border of the disputed region of
Kashmir, saying he had asked his commanders there to be aggressive in
the face of provocation.
14
January, 2013
General
Bikram Singh's remarks come amid mounting public anger in India after
Delhi accused Pakistani soldiers of slitting the throat of one of the
soldiers and decapitating him.
Despite
each side blaming the other for the worst outbreak of violence in the
area since a ceasefire was agreed nine years ago, analysts said a
breakdown in ties was highly unlikely.
The
two nations have fought three wars, two over Kashmir, since
independence in 1947 and are now both nuclear-armed.
Calling
the beheading of the soldier "gruesome", Singh told a news
conference: "We reserve the right to retaliate at a time and
place of our choosing."
Singh
said the Indian army would honor the ceasefire in Kashmir, so long as
Pakistan did, but would respond immediately to any violation of the
truce.
"I
expect all my commanders at the Line of Control to be both aggressive
and offensive in the face of provocation and fire," he said.
Last
week's fighting in the Himalayan region both nations claim comes at a
time when the two sides have made some progress in repairing ties,
notably by opening trade links.
Both
armies have lost two soldiers each in the fighting along parts of the
740-km (460-mile) de facto border this month.
"The
attack on January 8 was premeditated, a pre-planned activity. Such an
operation requires planning, detailed reconnaissance," Singh
said.
His
remarks came hours before local commanders met at a crossing point on
the ceasefire line for the first time since the fighting erupted to
try and reduce tensions. Both sides lodged protests, accusing each
other of ceasefire violations.
The
ceasefire in Kashmir has held since it went into effect in November
2003, surviving even the crisis in ties after the Mumbai attacks in
November 2008 by Pakistan-based militants.
Analysts
said it was unlikely the two armies would escalate the situation
further and that Singh's remarks may well have been made to maintain
the morale of his troops and to respond to a public outcry over the
mutilation of both soldiers' bodies.
"He
is trying to tell Pakistan that it cannot afford to open another
front while it is in a very critical state because of a large number
of internal issues," said research fellow Ashok K. Behuria at
the New Delhi-based Institute for Defence Studies and Analysis.
"He's
under pressure from the Indian people and the media but I don't think
that India will be so proactive as to respond disproportionately to
the situation," Behuria said.
The
family members of the slain Indian soldier, Hemraj Singh, have
started a hunger strike demanding retribution and that his remains be
back brought back. The family is not related to the army chief.
"Our
demand is not something big. My brother's head should be brought back
and the Pakistanis should be taught a lesson," said Jai Singh in
their village in northern India.
FLARE-UP
The
flare-up began on January 6 when Islamabad accused Indian soldiers of
entering its territory and killing a soldier. India said Pakistani
soldiers came about 600 meters (yards) into its territory two days
later and killed two Indian soldiers on patrol, the attack the army
chief was referring to.
Pakistan
said one of its soldiers was killed in further fighting on Thursday.
And, at a flag meeting in Chakan da Bagh in the Poonch sector,
Pakistan accused India of a raid across the ceasefire line last week,
a Pakistani army statement said.
Tensions
at the Kashmir frontier have been rising for some months now with the
two sides exchanging fire near a village in a northern stretch that
may have started the latest series of attacks and counter attacks.
Singh
said Indian troops had tried to improve their defenses after coming
under constant fire from Pakistan at Charonda village deep in
snow-capped mountains in the Uri sector where Pakistan troops were in
an advantageous position.
Three
civilians including a pregnant 23-year-old had been killed in
cross-border fire from Pakistan in October, he said.
"In
that areas when you are being fired upon, you don't expect soldiers
to walk in the open. Therefore soldiers have prepared a communication
trench, a crawl trench and an observation post," he said. Such
activity was routine and done by both armies to secure defenses, he
said.
Pakistan
said the construction of concrete defenses was prohibited under the
terms of the ceasefire.
Hundreds
of people protested on Monday in Muzaffarabad, the capital of
Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, and in second city Mirpur, accusing
India of stepping up tensions.
"They
(Indians) are bent upon destroying peace along the Line of Control by
resorting to firing without any provocation," Pakistani Kashmir
prime minister Chaudhry Abdul Majeed told the Muzaffarabad rally.
Tensions
over the hostilities in Kashmir threatened to spill into sport, with
members of India's Mumbai-based right wing Shiv Sena party protesting
against the presence of Pakistani players in a domestic Indian hockey
league.
The
players had to be whisked away and the team subsequently left Mumbai
on Monday for New Delhi, where the inaugural match of the five-team
Hockey India League will be held.
"Pakistan
is involved in militant attacks on India and you are letting them
make money in India ... this is injustice to the martyrs who have
died in these attacks," Rahul Narvekar, a spokesman for the
party told Reuters.

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