BlackkMamba
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I fully agree Sir in fact we should deploy and RPG and heavy machine guns on our front posts and also deploy snipersI believe the message is loud and clear, in a language they understand.
In order to silence the guns, same language must continue.
Surely this language is understood by Indians.
Love you brother you just nailed it. and for Pak Army message is clear keep hunting and for India the message is Party to abhi shuru hui haykafi arsay say kafi loog kah rahay thay kutay ko insaan ke zabaan samaj nahe ati... kutay ko pathar he maroo tu samaj ati hey.. acha huwa ... abhe b samaj nahe aye tu phir kutay kay saath mazeet kutay wali karni parayge!
10,000 Flee Homes Near Border in Jammu and Kashmir as Pakistani Shelling Continues
All India | Edited by Abhinav Bhatt (With inputs from Agencies) | Updated: January 06, 2015 09:41 IST
- JAMMU: Pakistani troops continued to fire across the border in Jammu and Kashmir overnight, targeting several Border Security Force or BSF posts in violation of the ceasefire.
The heavy shelling has forced nearly 10,000 people living close to the border to flee their homes. Schools and colleges are indefinitely closed and even relief camps have had to be evacuated in some areas, with the Pakistani shelling over the last few days extending to as much as 3.5 km inside Indian territory in some places like Chakra, Sherpur and Londi.
Ongoing examinations for Class XI have been put off.
Yesterday, 15 Indian posts were attacked by the Pakistan Rangers in Samba and Hiranagar. One BSF jawan was injured and later died. The Director General of the BSF is scheduled to go to Jammu today and visit the forward areas.
One woman was killed and 10 other civilians injured in ceasefire violations earlier this week.
New relief camps have been opened at Sallan, Chhankhatryan, Chak Haria and Upper Londi. There are now 14 camps to cater to the 4300 residents who have been evacuated and the authorities said more blankets and other supplies have been dispatched for the camps.
Around 2,500 people were evacuated on Monday alone; the number of people evacuated is expected to cross 12,000 as more than 50 villages have been affected with the increased intensity and range of shelling.
An Emergency Response Centre established by the district administration at Hiranagar has issued a high-alert in the wake of heavy shelling.
Four Pakistani civilians killed in firing along India border
Dawn.com | Imran Sadiq
Updated about 12 hours ago
An Indian Border Security Force (BSF) soldier patrols near the fenced border with Pakistan. — Reuters/file
SIALKOT: Indian Border Security Forces (BSF) personnel resorted to unprovoked firing and shelling along the Working Boundary in Sialkot's Zafarwal and Shakargarh sectors on Monday killing four Pakistani civilians, the Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement.
“2 more civilians embraced martyrdom due to Indian unprovoked firing and shelling,” the Pakistani military’s media wing said.
The ISPR said Indian border forces had resorted to shelling “on civilian population in Shakargarh sector in villages Sukhmaal, Bheke Chak and Bhurey Chak.”
“Exchange of firing continues. Pakistani troops [are] targeting Indian BSF positions which are firing in Pakistan area,” said the statement.
The latest casualties on Monday mounted the civilian death toll on the Pakistani to four.
Earlier, two civilians, including a woman and an 18-year-old boy died as a result of the firing, the ISPR had said.
A Chenab Rangers man and a civilian also sustained injuries in the firing, sources in the Chenab Rangers had told Dawn.
Sources also said that Indian Border Security Force (BSF) personnel, who were stationed at the Karole Karishna and Pansar posts in India, targeted Thakar pur and Karole posts on the Pakistani side.
Both sides continued to trade allegations, with the Indians blaming Pakistani forces of violating a ceasefire agreement.
A report published on The Times of India claimed that Pakistani Rangers violated the ceasefire by targeting border posts in Kathua and Samba sectors, drawing retaliation from BSF.
“Pakistani Rangers resorted to ceasefire violation and opened small arms firing in one post in Samba district and two areas in Kathua district late last night,” the TOI quoted officials as saying.
In December last year, the two countries had pledged to uphold the 2003 ceasefire accord which was left in tatters by repeated violations that year. The truce breaches had put the nascent bilateral peace dialogue on hold.
The Himalayan territory of Kashmir, which is the main contention, between the two countries, is divided between India and Pakistan by the UN-monitored de facto border of Line of Control (LoC). The territory is claimed in full by both the countries.