India goes back on word, violates LoC ceasefire again

0
165

Indian border security forces on Monday again violated the Line of Control (LoC) ceasefire by opening unprovoked firing along the Nakial sector in Sialkot. The latest violation comes just a day after border chiefs of both sides agreed to implement complete ceasefire along the Working Boundary between the two countries.

The Pakistan Army’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said Pakistani troops befittingly responded to Indian firing and silenced the enemy’s artillery.

Pakistani and Indian border security chiefs had agreed on Friday to maintain restraint on their disputed Kashmir frontier, as they sought to defuse tensions that have been heightened in recent months by militant attacks that each side blames the other for.

The border chiefs agreed to hold back cross-border firing and not to retaliate immediately to violations of a 15-year ceasefire, an Indian Interior Ministry official said.

The heads of India’s Border Security Force and the Pakistani Rangers met in New Delhi to find ways to de-escalate tensions along the border as part of a series of measures agreed by the leaders of the two countries in July.

“Both have decided not to immediately retaliate against firing from either side and to contact the other side to know the cause of firing,” the official said, reading from a draft text the two governments agreed.

Tens of thousands of soldiers are massed on either side of Kashmir, one of the world’s most militarised regions, and in recent months they have stepped up cross-border firing.

Last month, nine people were killed by the firings on the day the nuclear-armed neighbours marked the 50th anniversary of a war between them.

India accuses Pakistani soldiers of providing cover firing to help militants cross over and carrying out attacks in its part of Kashmir.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government has promised a tougher response to such violations than previous administrations, and last year the two armies engaged in the most serious exchanges since the 2003 ceasefire.

Pakistan denies giving material support to the Kashmir militants, but blames India for refusing to hold talks to resolve the 68-year-old territorial dispute.

Modi cancelled top level talks between the national security advisers of the two countries last month, objecting to Pakistan’s plan to meet Kashmiri separatists.

But the two governments agreed to let the border chiefs meet. The two forces will have greater communication to ensure things do not spiral out of control, the Indian official said.