The Tribune – Visa on arrival for Pakistan senior citizens

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, April 5. Indicating a small yet significant shift, India has started visa on arrival facility for senior citizens of Pakistan.

The facility, originally supposed to start on January 15 this year as part of the new liberalised visa regime between the two neighbours, was put on hold after two Indian soldiers were beheaded along the Line of Control (LoC) on January 6. Pakistan had, however allowed Indian senior citizens to utilise the facility in January.

A senior Home Ministry official said: “We have launched visa on arrival facility for Pakistan senior citizens at the Attari-Wagah Integrated Check Post from April 1.” No decision has been taken to allow group tourist visa facility to Pakistan nationals. The scheme was to start from March 15 but was put on hold by India citing “technical issues”.

After two Indian soldiers were beheaded along the LoC, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had said the incident had cast a shadow on bilateral relations and asked Pakistan to create conducive environment to take the normalisation process forward.

He had said he was yet to see any “tangible progress” in dismantling of terror infrastructure in Pakistan and bringing to justice the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror attacks. The new visa agreement was signed last September.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2013/20130406/main3.htm

The Tribune – Infiltration bid foiled near LoC; 4 militants killed

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, November 9. Four militants were killed in the Keran sector of Kupwara district in north Kashmir as troops foiled an infiltration bid near the Line of Control.

The Army said the militants were killed in an encounter after they were intercepted by troops at Hanuman post last night.

The search operation in the forest area was still on.

“Terrorists were trying to sneak into the Indian side at 1.30 am with huge quantity of arms. They were challenged and in the ensuing gun battle, four terrorists were killed. Troops have seized five AK-47 rifles and some ammunition from encounter the site,” Army spokesman Lt Colonel J S Brar said.

Sources said that identity of the militants could not established as their bodies were yet to be retrieved from the forests.

Army sources said before the onset of winter when the passes get closed due to heavy snowfall, militants would try to infiltrate into the Valley from traditional routes.

“This is a desperate attempt to ensure maximum infiltration before the winter sets in,” Brar said.

Army sources said before the onset of winter when the passes get closed due to snow, militants would try to infiltrate into the Valley from traditional routes.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20121110/main2.htm

The Tribune – Pakistan shelling kills 3 civilians in Uri; First major ceasefire violation in a decade in Valley

Tribune News Service

Srinagar, October 16. In a first major ceasefire violation in nearly a decade in Kashmir, three civilians, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed in unprovoked firing by Pakistani soldiers at Churanda village in Uri sector of Baramulla district today.

A third civilian, Shaheena (20), who was pregnant, died of shock due to heavy shelling.

The Army will lodge a protest with Pakistan over the ceasefire violation.

“The firing at Churanda village, barely 120 metres from the Line of Control (LoC), was unprovoked. Pakistani troops had been firing intermittently at the village since October 3, for which we had also lodged a protest. Around 10.30 am today, they used heavy machine guns and fired 82 mm mortar shells, having a range of over 5 km, at the village.

One shell hit a house in which two persons, including a 14-year-old boy, were killed,” said Major General Bipin Rawat, General Officer Commanding (GOC), 19 Infantry Division. “One woman also died of shock.”

While the Army claimed that the third victim died of shock, a police officer who visited the scene said all three had died of splinter injuries.

“The girl had suffered a splinter injury in the head,” said a police officer in Baramulla.

The two dead civilians have been identified as Mohammad Liayaqat (14), and Mohammad Shafiq (32).

Sources said the Indian troops retaliated to the firing that lasted almost an hour.

Sources said local residents made announcements from the village mosque, urging the Pakistani side to stop firing as civilians had died in the shelling.

The three bodies were buried in the village in the evening.

Minister for State for Home Nasir Aslam Wani termed the incident “unfortunate”. “The killing of civilians in cross-border shelling is unfortunate,” he said. Ceasefire violations have been happening regularly in the Jammu region. Two villagers were injured in unprovoked firing across the International Border in Samba district of the Jammu region earlier this month.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20121017/main3.htm

Dawn – Pakistan says attack across Line of Control in retaliation to ‘unprovoked’ attack

Srinagar, 17 October 2012. Pakistani soldiers fired heavy weapons into Indian-administered in retaliation to an “unprovoked attack” on a Pakistan army post, a Pakistani military official told AFP, in the latest reported skirmish between the rival nations.

Earlier on Tuesday, the Indian defence ministry had claimed that Pakistani soldiers fired heavy weapons into Indian-administered Kashmir and killed three civilians.

They opened fire near the village of Churunda, near the Line of Control that acts as the de facto border in the Kashmir region, according to the Indian statement.

“Pakistani troops… started firing heavy-calibre weapons on the houses of civilians of Churunda village resulting in the death of three civilians,” the statement said.

Pakistan army officials blamed the clash on “unprovoked” Indian fire on a Pakistan army post.

“Indian troops initiated unprovoked fire on Pakistan army post to which Pakistani troops responded,” a Pakistani army official told AFP.

Local residents have reported sporadic small-arms exchanges between Indian and Pakistani troops in the same sector for the past fortnight.

Tensions between the countries last flared in the wake of the Mumbai attacks in 2008, which India blamed on Pakistan-based militants and “official agencies” of Pakistan, a charge Islamabad has denied.

Two of the three wars between India and Pakistan have been fought over divided Kashmir, which both countries claim in full.

http://dawn.com/2012/10/17/india-alleges-pakistan-border-shelling-kills-three/

The Hindu – Indian, Pakistani Commanders to meet in bid to end bloody LoC skirmishes

Fighting began on June 11 when sniper killed a BSF soldier

Praveen Swami

New Delhi, 23 June 2012.  Brigade-level Commanders of India and Pakistan will meet on the Line of Control in Poonch on Saturday, hoping to defuse 10 days of bloody skirmishes which have left six soldiers dead and led to artillery deployment close the Line of Control (LoC) for the first time in a decade.

The meeting between 10 Brigade Commander T.S. Sandhu and his Pakistani counterpart, 6 Sector Commander Amir Sohail Ashraf, comes a week after Pakistan rejected an appeal for a Colonel-level flag meeting, sources in the Army said.

The fighting began on June 11 after Border Security Force soldier P.K. Mishra was shot dead by a sniper. Soldiers at the post, where Mishra was stationed, code named Kranti, returned the fire.

Two days later, soldier Harvinder Singh was shot dead in firing on a nearby post, code named Kripan. Four Pakistani soldiers, intelligence sources told The Hindu, were also reported to have been killed.

New Delhi-based military sources said the Army had pushed 155-millimetre Bofors guns into firing positions along the LoC from Mendhar to Poonch, fearing further escalation.

Islamabad has not offered any official comment on the clashes. However, Pakistan shut down the Chakan-da-Bagh border outpost for local trade this week and suspended the weekly bus service from Poonch to Rawalakote.

The bus service was inaugurated by United Progressive Alliance chairperson Sonia Gandhi in 2006, and has been seen as a key element in the India-Pakistan peace process.

No clear account has emerged of what led to the skirmishes, which came as Indian troops were engaged in rebuilding counter-infiltration fencing that runs across the LoC.

Pakistan has in the past complained that Indian troops engage in unprovoked firing across the border when the fencing disintegrates in the winter snowfall.

India says its aggressive posture is necessitated by the Pakistan Army’s continuous backing for groups of infiltrating jihadists.

“For all the good optics on India-Pakistan relations,” says Sushant Sareen, an expert at the Institute for Defence and Strategic Analysis, “the reality is you have one army deployed on hair-trigger alert, expecting infiltrating jihadists, and another on hair-trigger alert looking for gaps in its adversary’s defences. It is no surprise at all the clashes like these take place.”

“From our point of view,” a senior military official in Poonch said, “the Pakistanis were testing our resolve. We responded; not with a sledgehammer, perhaps, but with a large hammer.”

Even though a ceasefire went into force along the Line of Control in 2002, small-scale skirmishes have continued unabated.

Last year, for example, saw fierce fighting along the LoC in Karnah, some 140 km from Srinagar.

Highly placed military sources told The Hindu that the fighting began after two Indian soldiers were beheaded in an attack on a forward position by a jihadist unit. Indian special forces responded by targeting a Pakistani forward post, killing several soldiers. Intermittent clashes continued through the year, into December.

In July 2008, four Pakistani troops and an Indian solider were reported killed in fighting near Handwara.

Like the ongoing clashes in Krishna Ghati, the skirmish began with a dispute over the construction of new fortifications around an Indian position, code named Eagle Post.

Earlier that year, BSF constable Bhanwar Lal was killed in a clash along the LoC in Rajouri, while 8 Gurkha Rifles’ Jawashwar Lami Chhame was killed when jihadists shelled an Indian forward post in Poonch.

For the most part, these clashes have remained localised, with both armies seeking to contain the fallout.

In September 2009, Pakistani military commanders gave their Indian counterparts packets and sweets on the occasion of Eid, even as their soldiers were exchanging fire along the Krishna Ghati sector, as well as on Pargwal island, near Nikowal in Jammu. Like now, a meeting of Brigade commanders had to be summoned to defuse the crisis.

Decline in fatalities

However, fatalities have sharply declined compared to the pre-ceasefire period. In 1998, 78 Indian soldiers and 78 civilians were killed in 4,314 incidents of firing, Jammu and Kashmir government data obtained by The Hindu shows. In 2002, 114 soldiers and 36 civilians died.

Last year, though, only two soldiers were killed and one civilian injured, in 29 fire-exchanges on the LoC. This year, 19 clashes have taken place.

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3559915.ece

The Tribune – PoK [Azad Kashmir] forest fire sets off mines along LoC in Poonch; Damages 3-km fence in Krishna Ghati belt

Darshan Bharti

Poonch, June 22. Over 100 mines planted along the Line of Control (LoC) in the Balakote area of Poonch district exploded following a forest fire in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), triggering panic among residents.

The forest fire broke in PoK and reached the Indian territory in Dera Dibsi in the Balakote sector, damaging the fence along the Line of Control for over 3 km in the Balakote area, sources said.

The Forest Range Officer, Mendher Abdul Razak Khan, said: “The fire broke out from the PoK side on June 21 and entered the Indian territory, causing damage to some bunkers and the telecommunication set-up. Fire tenders of the Army and the civil administration are trying to douse the flames.”

The fire spread along the border belt up to the lower Krishna Ghati belt, triggering several mine explosions planted by troops as part of the anti-infiltration measures, the sources said.

There has been no loss of life or injury to anyone in the fire. There was no damage caused to any forward post along the LoC in the fire.

However, there have been minefield explosions and some damage to communication cables along the LoC and these are being repaired, the sources added.

Situation under control: Army

Jammu: The Defence PRO, Cololel R K Palta, has said that everything is under control along the LoC. “Everything is under control and there is no cause for concern. There is no habitation in the area and it is a very isolated part of the LoC,” Colonel Palta said.

He said that mines had exploded in the fenced area and not in the inhabited area close to the LoC.

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2012/20120623/j&k.htm#2

The Asian Age – Malik: Line of Control will soon fall like Berlin wall

Yusuf Jameel, Asian Age Correspondent

Srinagar, 16 May 2012. Pro-independence Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) leader Muhammad Yasin Malik on Tuesday regretted New Delhi’s reported decision not to allow him return home from Pakistan using the Chakoti-Uri, crossing point along the Line of Control (LoC), to attend the funeral of his father who died in Srinagar earlier on Monday.

There has been no word from New Delhi on Mr Malik’s claim and the officials of the state government here said they had no knowledge about the matter and, in fact, were not supposed to speak on the issue necessarily related to MEA.

“It is really unfortunate that we the people of Kashmir can’t cross this bloody line even in urgent situation. This shows our helplessness. But I’m sure as death that like Berlin Wall this unnatural barrier will also be demolished one day,” the JKLF leader told this newspaper after attending the funeral of his father Ghulam Qadir Malik, 65, who died of lungs failure.

Hundreds of people, including senior separatist leaders Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq attended the funeral here on Tuesday afternoon soon after Yasin Malik arrived here from New Delhi. Chief minister Omar Abdullah also condoled the demise of Senior Malik expressing sympathy with the bereaved family and prayed for peace to the departed soul.

JKLF leader, whose Pakistani wife Mushaal Mullick recently gave birth to a baby girl in Islamabad, said that a Srinagar-based journalist called him up in Islamabad to inform that the Indian authorities have hinted at him being allowed to cross the LoC at Chakoti-Uri if a formal request was made by Islamabad.

http://www.asianage.com/india/malik-loc-will-soon-fall-berlin-wall-233

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 Hindu – 2,156 unidentified bodies in Kashmir graves to undergo DNA profiling

Shujaat Bukhari

Srinagar, September 16, 2011. The Jammu and Kashmir State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) has recommended the identification of all those 2,156 people buried in unmarked graves in north Kashmir. The graves were identified through an investigation done by its police wing last month.

In its order on Friday, a division bench of the SHRC comprising Chairman Justice (retd.) Syed Bashiruddin and Javed Ahmad Kawoos suggested that all means like DNA profiling be used to identify the bodies buried in 38 places in Kashmir.

The bench made six recommendations to address the issue and linked it to cases of disappearances in the State.

It said that “the dead bodies in unmarked graves … shall be identified by all available means and techniques like DNA profile, physical description, dental examination, distinctive medical characteristics, finger prints, carbon dating, forensic pathology etc. as may be applicable.”

The aim is to see if the identity of the bodies  matches the identity of ‘disappeared’ persons.

Human rights groups in the State claim “thousands” of Kashmiris have disappeared since 1990. The documented numbers are more modest though no less alarming — the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons has 350 names on its roster while the State government acknowledges some 1,200 residents are “missing”. While the APDP’s charge is that the majority of these ‘disappeared’ persons have been illegally killed by the security forces, the State says the missing numbers are mostly made up of young men who crossed the Line of Control to join militant groups.

Positive DNA matches with family members of missing persons may not immediately settle the debate over the circumstances leading to the death of the individuals buried in these unmarked graves – eg. whether the encounter was genuine or fake – but they will likely embarrass the State and the Centre .

On August 20, the first official inquiry report of the SHRC suggested there were 2,730 unmarked graves across Baramulla, Bandipore and Kupwara districts. According to the report, 574 of these were buried by locals, leaving 2,156 bodies still buried in the unidentified graves.

The Commission has now ordered that DNA profile sampling be supplemented by modern scientific techniques and methods facilitating and ensuring matching of the unidentified dead bodies in unmarked graves on maintenance of the identification profiles with the identity of a particular dead body or a disappeared or any other person whose identification with the bodies discovered in unmarked graves is sought or claimed by the families concerned.

The SHRC has also said that after the bodies have been identified, any prosecution for crimes like culpable homicide shall be undertaken on the basis of the due process of law.

It asked the government to ensure compensatory justice in case identified disappeared persons had suffered an unnatural death. To address the larger issue, the Bench said “an independent duly representative structure/body…” be constituted and put in place in time”

http://www.thehindu.com/news/states/other-states/article2459274.ece  

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