India-Pakistan gunfire triggers terror of past conflict

Newsworm
with
AFP
May 4, 2025
For 10 nights, India and Pakistan have exchanged gunfire across Kashmir’s Line of Control, escalating tensions after an attack on Indian civilians in April. Residents live in constant fear, many have built bunkers, but inadequate infrastructure leaves them vulnerable. Despite government efforts, the community calls for peace, hoping for safer lives and better protection
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Residents in nearby villagers have heard nightly gunfire between Indian and Pakistani soldiers echoing from the de facto border between the nuclear-armed rivals - AFP

For 10 nights straight, gunfire between Indian and Pakistani soldiers has echoed from the mountains and deep valleys that form the heavily defended de facto border between the nuclear-armed rivals. And, each night, it brings back afresh the horror for 50-year-old maize farmer Bashir Dar, the last time the bitter enemies battled across the Line of Control in contested Kashmir, his wife was killed.

"The mortar shell landed right next to my wife, she died instantly", said Dar, describing fighting in 2020 near his mountain village of Balkote, on the Indian side of the dividing line. His home lies less than a mile from Pakistani-controlled territory. "These days, that moment flashes in my head all the time," the widower said, holding up a picture of his late wife. "Every night, I sit huddled with my four children in one room, with an ear to the sounds of gunfire coming from the border."

Relations between the neighbours have plummeted after the worst attack on Indian civilians in years, in which a gang of terrorists shot dead 26 men, mostly Hindus.

India accused Pakistan of this terror attack while Islamabad has rejected the accusations. Indian police have issued wanted posters for three men, two Pakistanis and an Indian, accused of carrying out the April 22 attack at Pahalgam. They say they are members of the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba group, a UN-designated terrorist organisation. 

Cleaning bunkers

India's army said Sunday that its troops had exchanged gunfire with Pakistani soldiers overnight across the Line of Control in multiple sites, which it says has taken place every night since April 24. The army said "unprovoked small arms fire" from Pakistan, to which Indian soldiers "responded promptly and proportionately".

There was no immediate confirmation from Pakistan, but Islamabad, whose military on Saturday said it carried out a "training launch" of a missile weapons system, has accused India of a "ceasefire violation".

Government employee Mansoor Ahmed, 38, took two days off to prepare his bunker he had built in the village, at a cost of some 200,000 rupees ($2,300).

"I cleaned up my bunker and stocked it up for the first time since 2021," Ahmed said, referring to the year India and Pakistan agreed to a renewed border ceasefire. Many of those without bunkers have already left for safer places like Baramulla, further from the dividing line.

"Six families in my neighbourhood left their homes for safety during the last few days," said truck driver Mohammad Ibrahim, who has stayed with his wife and children.

"They requested us to look after their homes and cattle."

No protection

In the villages of Churunda and Tilawari, residents said officials had visited, telling them to check the condition of community bunkers - AFP

In the villages of Churunda and Tilawari, fearful residents said officials had visited, telling them to check the condition of a few government-constructed community bunkers. "There are only six bunkers, and each bunker can accommodate a maximum of 15 people," a young villager told AFP, declining to be named.

In Churunda village, there are some 120 families. "No proper facilities exist in the bunkers, and when it rains, water enters inside. The bunkers have not been built properly," said the man. "If war happens, these bunkers will be useless."

AFP reporters saw a community bunker in the village with thick concrete walls and a slab on top. But the floor was covered in runny mud.

Residents are fearful, and watch news on their mobile phones constantly. "We live in constant fear of becoming victims of the conflict," said a young woman in Tilawari, who declined to be named. "We want peace," she said. "We want to send our children to school and live our lives without fear."