BANDALA, PAKISTAN — Villagers in three areas along the de
facto border between Indian- and Pakistani-controlled Kashmir said this past
week that they had fled their homes in fear after intense shelling and firing
from the Indian side but that they did not believe India’s claim Thursday that
it had sent armed troops to conduct late-night “surgical strikes” on militant
targets there.
In several dozen interviews, residents of the Bhimber, Chamb
and Sahmani districts adjoining the Line of Control said they had been jarred
from sleep by the barrage of firepower Wednesday. But none said they had seen
or heard anything that supported India’s claim that it carried out cross-border
strikes on several staging areas for militant groups that left “double digits”
of militants dead.
Pakistani officials have repeatedly denied India’s claims,
saying that Indian troops only fired small arms across the Line of Control,
killing two Pakistani soldiers. Tensions between the rival nuclear powers are
at the highest level in a decade.
Muhammad Bota, 40, a mason in this hillside village, said
that his son woke him up shouting, “India has attacked!” and that the night was
filled with noise.
“We are used to routine shelling, but this was unending,
with deafening sounds,” he said. “We believed it was the start of war, and I
prayed for the safety of my family and recited all the Koran verses I could
remember.”
But Bota, like many other residents interviewed, said he did
not see any signs of Indian troops attacking or crossing the fortified line
less than a mile away.
“All the villagers were up, and we didn’t see any troops
from the other side or helicopters,” he said. “India says it killed militants
here, but the people who live here know each other for generations. If there
were some militants somewhere around, they couldn’t have gone undetected. This
is all propaganda of India.”
In Bhimber, a town several miles from the Line of Control, a
store salesman named Mehran Younas Sheikh, 31, said that all schools and
government offices had been shut down since the intensive firing started and
that many people living close to the border had fled to the town.
“It’s a very beautiful area,” Sheikh said of the region’s
forested ridges of pine and birch, “but now one feels and witness the silence
of death, apart from the cross firing between the two armies during the night.”
Hostilities between India and Pakistan, fanned by months of
violent clashes between Indian troops and Kashmiri protesters, escalated
sharply after Sept. 18, when 19 Indian soldiers died in what India said was an
attack on their camp by militants who had infiltrated from Pakistan.
Under domestic pressure to retaliate, the government of
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced it had conducted a five-hour
overnight paramilitary attack on several suspected terrorist camps, killing
scores. Pakistan’s military claimed that it killed eight Indian soldiers in
retaliatory fire and that two of its men had died when India shelled a border
post in Sahmani.
A cross-border strike by India would be the first major
breach of the Line of Control it has publicly acknowledged in years of hostile
but cautious relations with Pakistan. In the past it has avoided an overt
provocation that could risk a wider conflict, while accusing Pakistan of harboring
and supporting terrorist groups.
In several villages, residents described fleeing quickly
from the heavy late-night gunfire, many leaving their livestock and crops.
Bashir Papra, 55, said his family decided to leave their home in Chamb because
the Indian shelling “was so heavy we felt our whole village would come down.”
Some residents said they were so exhausted by years of
living with tension and fear that they would almost rather see the two
countries fight it out. Muhammad Kurshid, 26, a Chamb resident, said he has
faith in Pakistan’s military leaders to win in such a conflict.
“You would think I am insane to want a war,” he said. “No, I
am not, it’s just that we can’t spend a normal daily life.”
In Sahmani, a verdant district along the Line of Control
with army posts every few hundred yards, residents said they had a close view
of activities along the border and described seeing the sky light up with
shelling above a mountain ridge where Pakistani troops are stationed.
“If anyone is moving on the mountain, we can see them easily
from here,” said villager Faheem Ahmed, 48. “There was no activity of enemy
troops on the mountain, which is the only way they can come.”
credits: Annie Gowan
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