Police say five foreign militants killed in Indian-administered Kashmir

Indian paramilitary troopers stand guard along a road in Srinagar on May 16, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 16 June 2023
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Police say five foreign militants killed in Indian-administered Kashmir

  • A joint team of Indian army, police prevented infiltration across the border by the militants, police said
  • The Muslim-majority Kashmir has been the site of a bloody insurrection against New Delhi since 1990s

SRINAGAR: Indian police said security forces killed five foreign militants early on Friday in a gunfight in Kashmir along the Line of Control (LOC), the defacto border with Pakistan in the Himalayan region.

A joint team of Indian army and police prevented infiltration across the border by the militants, police said.

“Five foreign militants were killed in the operation in Jumagund area near the LOC. The search operation in the area is going on,” said Vijay Kumar, the chief of Indian police in Kashmir. He did not specify their nationalities.

Claimed in full by both India and Pakistan but only controlled in parts by the nuclear-armed neighbors, Muslim-majority Kashmir has been the site of a bloody insurrection against New Delhi since the 1990s.

Hindu-majority India says Pakistan, an Islamic state, supports the militancy in Kashmir. Islamabad denies this, saying it only provides diplomatic and moral support to the Kashmiri people.

Ashok Yadav, a senior Indian security official deployed for the security of the border, said last week that the melting of snow in the mountains might open traditional infiltration routes along the LOC.

The Indian army said it has also foiled two infiltration attempts since Thursday.

Indian Army spokesperson Devender Anand said in one instance, troops challenged the infiltrators but they managed to escape under the cover of darkness, bad weather and thick foliage.

“A large cache of arms and ammunition left by fleeing infiltrators was recovered during a search of the area,” he said.


Danish PM backs NATO ‘permanent presence’ around Greenland

Updated 4 sec ago
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Danish PM backs NATO ‘permanent presence’ around Greenland

  • “We have asked NATO to be more present in the Arctic region,” Frederiksen said
  • She said discussions about Denmark’s sovereignty were off the table

BRUSSELS: Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said Thursday that NATO states backed having a “permanent presence” in the Arctic, including around Greenland, after US President Donald Trump claimed a framework deal was struck to satisfy his demands.
“We have asked NATO to be more present in the Arctic region,” Frederiksen said at the start of a European Union summit in Brussels.
“Everybody in NATO agrees about that, the Arctic states, but also other member states, that we need a permanent presence from NATO in the Arctic region, including around Greenland.”
Trump on Wednesday backed down from the threat of using force or tariffs to try to take over Greenland, after saying an agreement was reached in talks with NATO chief Mark Rutte.
Details remained scant of the accord — but Trump did not make any progress toward his goal of trying to gain control over the autonomous Arctic territory of fellow NATO member Denmark.
Frederiksen said discussions about Denmark’s sovereignty were off the table. “It cannot be changed,” she said.
NATO said following the talks that the alliance would ramp up security in the Arctic, after Trump used the perceived threat from Russia and China to justify his desire for Greenland.
A source familiar with the discussions said Denmark and the United States would also look to renegotiate a 1951 defense pact on Greenland that governs American troop deployments on the island.
“We said to the Americans a year ago that we can discuss our agreement on defense, but it has to be in the framework of us as a sovereign state,” Frederiksen said.
The Danish leader insisted the two sides “have to work together respectfully, without threatening each other.”
“I, of course, hope to find a political solution within the framework of democracy and how we cooperate as allies,” she said.