Jammu : Pakistani troops engaged in unprovoked firing along the Line of
Control (LoC) and the International Border (IB) in multiple sectors across four
border districts of Jammu and Kashmir, prompting Indian forces to 'respond
effectively', officials said on Wednesday.
The firing, which began with small arms, was reported from the Pargwal
sector along the IB in Jammu district, and the Sunderbani and Naushera sectors
in Rajouri district.
This marked the sixth consecutive night of ceasefire violations by
Pakistan along the LoC, amidst heightened tensions between New Delhi and
Islamabad following a recent terror attack in Pahalgam on April 22.
"On the night of April 29-30, Pakistan Army posts initiated
unprovoked small-arms fire across the Line of Control opposite the Naushera,
Sunderbani, and Akhnoor sectors in the Union Territory of Jammu &
Kashmir," a defence spokesperson in Jammu said.
The Indian Army troops responded swiftly and proportionately, the
spokesperson added. Similar incidents of unprovoked small-arms fire were also
reported from Pakistani posts across the LoC in Baramulla and Kupwara districts
in the Kashmir Valley, and across the IB in the Pargwal sector.
Initially, the firing began in Kupwara and Baramulla districts and then
spread to the Poonch and Akhnoor sectors. It further escalated to the
Sunderbani and Naushera sectors in Rajouri district, followed by firing along
the IB in Jammu’s Pargwal sector.
Since the night of April 24, shortly after India suspended the Indus
Water Treaty in response to the killing of 26 people in the Pahalgam terror
attack, Pakistani troops have been engaging in unprovoked firing at various
locations along the LoC in Jammu and Kashmir, starting from the Kashmir valley.
On the same day, Pakistan closed its airspace to Indian airlines,
suspended trade and closed the Wagah border crossing, and warned that any
attempt to divert water under the Indus Water Treaty would be considered an
"Act of War".
India and Pakistan had agreed to a renewed ceasefire in February 2021
when the Directors General of Military Operations (DGMOs) of both countries
reaffirmed their commitment to the 2003 ceasefire agreement.
India shares a 3,323-km-long border with Pakistan, comprising the
International Border (IB), approximately 2,400 km from Gujarat to Akhnoor in
Jammu; the 740-km-long LoC from Jammu to Leh; and the 110-km Actual Ground
Position Line (AGPL) in the Siachen region.