The Hindu – Pakistan serves démarche to Indian envoy over LoC firing

Islamabad, 11 January 2013. Pakistan’s Foreign Office on Friday called in Indian High Commissioner Sharat Sabharwal to lodge a protest over the death of a Pakistani soldier in an incident of firing along the Line of Control, which has witnessed a string of clashes since the weekend.

Officials in the Foreign Office told PTI that Mr. Sabharwal was served a démarche by Foreign Secretary Jalil Abbas Jilani over Thursday’s incident in Battal sector of the LoC, which the Pakistan Army said had resulted in the death of a soldier.

There have been three ceasefire violations along the LoC in the past five days.

The Indian Army said two of its soldiers were killed in a cross-border raid by Pakistani troops on Tuesday while another Pakistani soldier died on Sunday.

The clashes were among the most serious violations of the truce that was put in place in late 2003.

Pakistan’s Foreign Office had earlier called in Indian Deputy High Commissioner Gopal Baglay on January 7 to protest the incident that occurred a day earlier.

The External Affairs Ministry had summoned Pakistan High Commissioner Salman Bashir earlier this week to protest the killing of the two Indian soldiers. (PTI)

http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/pak-serves-dmarche-to-indian-envoy-over-loc-firing/article4298362.ece?homepage=true

The Tribune – J & K; Samba villagers first noticed tunnel

Ravi Krishnan Khajuria, Tribune News Service

Chalyari (Samba, India-Pakistan border), July 29. Had a retired soldier and a teenager of Chachwal village not informed the BSF about the caved-in portion of their agricultural fields, barely 150 metres from the barbed fence along the international border in Samba sector, Pakistan would have possibly succeeded in its nefarious designs to disrupt India’s Independence Day celebrations.

Fear has gripped the border village after the detection of the tunnel which was being dug 25 feet below the ground. Prem Singh, a 60-year old retired Army soldier, said: “After a brief spell of rains on July 24 and 25, I noticed that a portion of my agricultural land had caved in. Sensing some foul play, I rushed to inform BSF jawans, who then alerted their senior officers.”

Soon the news spread like wildfire and since then senior BSF, CID, IB and district administration officials have been visiting the site to take stock of the situation, he said.

Sukhdev Singh (19) of the same village had also noticed big cracks in his field on July 26.

“My field had caved in and I immediately rushed to the nearby BSF post. The company commandant of the battalion concerned then inspected the site and thereafter an earth mover was requisitioned,” said Singh. He said the first of its kind incident in the area has created scare in the area.

Sandeep, last year in December, had shifted a BSF jawan to safety, who was hit by Pakistani bullets while patrolling the border on a horse. Another villager, Ashok Singh Lalotra, said fear has now gripped the villagers in Chachwal.

“Ahead of Independence Day, they could have used it for any terror activity including pushing armed terrorists and planting high-intensity explosives in the village or on the highway town to cause bloodshed,” said Lalotra.

Some panicked villagers have sent their children to the houses of their relatives in Samba town, he added.

A senior Border Security Force officer said with the detection of the tunnel, a big plan of the “enemy” has been foiled.

Officiating Inspector General of the Border Security Force, Jammu Frontier, NS Jamwal said the presence of a tunnel shows sheer desperation on the part of Pakistan to push armed militants into the state.

“The tunnel is 250 m inside our territory and probably as much stretch is on the other side in dense jungles (Lumbriyal post) in Pakistan. It must have taken more than six months to dig a tunnel that long,” said Jamwal. “We are trying to ascertain its origin,” he said.

In May 2008, heavily armed terrorists had intruded into the Indian side from Bainglard area in Samba sector and killed six persons, including a politician, his wife, two soldiers, a woman and a senior photo journalist of a local daily, besides injuring six others at Kaily Mandi in Samba.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120730/main2.htm

The Hindu – In Siachen, weather is enemy as search for avalanche victims continues

Anita Joshua

Gayari, Siachen, 4 May 2012. Forever hostile to all life on the towering heights of this glacier, the weather has been particularly nasty ever since April 7 when a massive avalanche wiped out an entire battalion of the Pakistan Army in the Gayari sector at 13,000 feet.

If overcast skies bring along with them sub-zero temperatures and blizzards, bright sunlight and rising temperatures raise the possibility of more slides that caused the avalanche in the first place.

The weather changes come with little announcement as a group of journalists saw for themselves while being helihopped by the Army to Siachen’s Ground Zero on Thursday.

For the first time, an Indian journalist was included in the group being taken to witness the rescue operations. Rescue workers have been struggling for nearly a month to recover the bodies of the 139 men — 8 of them civilians. But until now, not a single one has been found. Only some traces of the battalion headquarters have surfaced: a few life jackets, pieces of the soldiers’ igloo accommodation, and medicines were found about 600 metres from the original location. That was on April 23, over a fortnight after the avalanche.

Nothing has been found since.

Yet the search continues, and the Chief of the Army Staff, Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, reiterated, while talking to the visiting journalists, that it would continue until the bodies, each one of them, was found.

“The minimum we can do is recover the bodies,” said General Kayani, on his third visit since the disaster. On a previous visit, he had said: “If we need to dig out this mountain, we will do so to get the bodies,” no matter how long it took.

The weather and the inhospitable terrain have taken more lives on this side of the glacier as well as on the Indian side than the actual conflict, and now it is the most slowing factor of the rescue work.

This is difficult to fathom from afar or from the pictures that are being regularly released by the Army about the work going on in the Gayari sector to find the bodies, but it is immediately apparent to the visitor.

The father of Major Zaka ul-Haq, the battalion second-in command who perished in the avalanche with his men, had accompanied the COAS to the site. Fighting back his tears, the bereaved father from Muzzafargarh in the Punjab province, urged the Army to declare them dead, something it has not done so far. He conceded that it was only after coming here that he realised what an uphill task was under way to find the bodies.

The Army had apparently considered making the announcement on April 30 — a day designated as ‘Yaum-e-Shuhada’ when the military remembers the sacrifices of its personnel — but held back.

Every day brings a new challenge for the rescuers, and the barren greyness of the area is a stark reminder of the futility of a war in the highest battlefield of the world. This is an area where the mountains seek to challenge the skies and man on the Pakistani as well as the Indian side of the glacier has sought to challenge both not only at his own peril but also nature’s.

Putting the task of the rescuers in perspective, Commander of the Force Command Northern Areas Ikram ul Haq said the area that requires to be dug up is 3.6 million cubic feet in mass. Of this, 1.73 million cubic feet, or roughly more than a third, has been excavated.

Since the avalanche took place around 2 a.m., most of the men would have been indoors, so the focus of the rescuers is on tracking down the main accommodation area.

The area has been zeroed in on primarily with the help of two rocks — one of which bears the words ‘Welcome’ and was near the entrance, and the other ‘Allah Hafiz,’ near the exit.

Still, according to Major General Haq, the rescue teams would be able to hit the ground level of the main accommodation by this monthend only.

“The problem is that after every 20-30 feet, we are encountering huge boulders which we are now blasting, despite expert advice against it.”

Pointing to a boulder sitting in front of the ‘Bilafond La Wall’ — which the Army had thought would protect the battalion headquarters from slides that are frequent in the area — he said it measured 22 metres in height and 44 metres in visible length. “This boulder came down with the avalanche which came at such speed and intensity that the Bilafond La Wall could not stop it.”

Similar boulders are being encountered all along the way by rescue workers. To avoid triggering more slides in the process of blasting, the boulders are being blasted in the morning as “this is the only way we can make our way through this,” despite the heavy machinery that has been shipped in from Rawalpindi. Ferrying the machinery itself has proved to be a challenge as it has to be done by road. At Juglot in Gilgit district
on the Karakoram Highway, they have to be dismantled as the bridges en route cannot take their weight, and then put back together at Goma, a base camp of the Army. All this takes a minimum of a fortnight, and on any given day 30 per cent of the equipment cannot be used due to snags, caused mainly by the weather and rocky terrain.

The equipment and expertise brought in by some European countries were of no use as they are made for homogeneous snow-laden avalanches, and not the mix of snow, sand, slush and hard rock that they encountered in Gayari.

The ground-penetrating radars donated by China too had the same limitations. The mercurial swings in the weather have ensured that for nearly the entire month, helicopters could not fly into Gayari. This is a delayed winter, and at a time of changing seasons, slides are almost a daily occurrence. On one day, there were as many as 54 of them, said the FCNA commander, and each slide is preceded by very strong blizzards.

He is of the view that the April 7 avalanche was also triggered by the late winter and frequent changes in temperatures.

An added problem is that the avalanche blocked the river Gayari, changed the lay of the land even as it took lives.

After days of work, a water course has been opened to clear the lake that was formed by the blockade on the river.

Simultaneously, a wall had to be constructed around the artificial lake to prevent the water from inundating the area marked out for excavation. The construction has disturbed the area so much that it is no longer safe for habitation.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3384842.ece 

The Tribune – Border haul: BSF seizes 23 kg heroin worth Rs 115 cr

Tribune News service

Chandigarh, February 4. In two separate incidents along the Indo-Pakistan border in Punjab last night, the Border Security Force seized 23 kg heroin, valued at Rs 115 crore in the international market, along with a pistol and eight rounds of ammunition.

Around 13 kg heroin and a pistol were seized at the Pallopati border outpost in the Ferozepur Sector, while 10 kg contraband was seized at Ghoga outpost in Amritsar Sector, said the BSF in a statement here today. The alleged smugglers at both places managed to flee under the cover of darkness.

Acting on a tip-off, special nakas were laid in the vicinity of the Pallopati border outpost. On the intervening night of Feb 3 and 4, security personnel observed movement of three suspected persons from Pakistan side. The smugglers came near the Pillar No. 145/3 of the international border at around 4 am.

While two persons stayed back, the third person, who was carrying a bag, approached the barbed wire fence. He was challenged and three mortar flares were fired to illuminate the area. The naka party then fired in the direction of smugglers, who managed to escape. A search of the area produced 13 packets of narcotics wrapped with adhesive tape and one loaded pistol.

In the second incident, a special naka was laid near Ghoga outpost. At around 4.30 am, BSF troops heard some sound near the fence and spotted movement of a person carrying a plastic pipe from the Pakistan side. He ran away after being challenged. Ten packets of heroin were recovered from the pipe, which was left behind by the smuggler.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120205/main8.htm

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