09 January,2013 06:39 AM IST | | Agencies
In a brazen violation of the 2003 ceasefire, Pakistani troops yesterday intruded into Jammu and Kashmir and killed two Indian soldiers by slitting their throats, officials said.
Pakistani soldiers, apparently from the 29 Baloch regiment, took advantage of a dense fog to sneak into an Indian post in Sona Gali area in the border district of Poonch.
Poonch Deputy Commissioner AK Sahu said the Pakistanis killed the two Indian soldiers and wounded a third. "Pakistani soldiers... slit the throats of two army soldiers."
Army sources said that the Pakistani troops took away the weapons of the dead Indian soldiers - Sudhakar Singh and Hemraj of 13 Rajputana Rifles.
The sources said the Pakistanis reached the post since it was located close to the fence near the LoC, which divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
The Indian Army has erected a three-tier fence in Indian territory running along the LoC. The fence is about 500 metres to two kilometres inside Indian territory and seeks to prevent Pakistani intrusion.
But the Pakistanis sneaked in using the fog in the forested area as a cover, an army spokesman said. "The (Indian) patrol spotted them and engaged the intruders for about half hour after which the Pakistani troops retreated", he said.
The official termed the intrusion and killings as "yet another grave provocation by the Pakistan Army". He said the latest attack was being taken up "sternly through official channels".
The report of the Pakistani attack - which has the potential to derail India-Pakistan relations - came soon after India told Pakistan "to ensure that the sanctity of LoC is upheld at all times".
Pak fully prepared
Also yesterday, Pakistani army chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani visited Sialkot and asked the army to remain "fully prepared to respond to the full spectrum of threats, direct or indirect, overt or covert".
He said Pakistan was putting in place a new concept of war fighting "evolved and validated in the Azm-e-Nau (New Resolve) series of war games and exercises", the Associated Press of Pakistan reported.
âIndia respects LoC'
The Indian external affairs ministry denied that Indian troops crossed the LoC in Rampur sector or violated the ceasefire in force since 2003 in the area as claimed by Islamabad. "India is committed to the sanctity of LoC," he said, calling it the most important part of the India-Pakistan confidence-building measures.
"We call upon the Pakistan authorities to ensure that the sanctity of the LoC is upheld at all times and to ensure that such incidents of unprovoked firing do not recur."
The spokesman was referring to an earlier incident which Pakistan says involved firing by Indian troops that left one of their soldiers dead.
India says that the director generals of military operation of both countries were in touch over the earlier firing.
New Delhi says it were the Pakistani who triggered the earlier gun battle. Their "unprovoked firing on Indian troops" damaged the roof of a house in Churunda village. "Indian troops undertook controlled retaliation in response."u00a0