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There has been a continuous exchange of fire between Indian and Pakistani solder's

 

There has been a continuous exchange of fire between Indian and Pakistani solder's 

Pakistan Army opens fire across LoC; Indian Army responds appropriately. (ANI/ representative image )



There has been a continuous exchange of fire between Indian and Pakistani troops along the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir for the past 8 days.

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The exchange of fire continued on Thursday (May 1) night. However, there were no reports of casualties. NDTV reported.

This has led to eight consecutive nights of firing between Indian and Pakistani troops on the Kashmir border.

Although the Indian media has always blamed Pakistan for the firing, there has been no information from Pakistan or the country's media about last night's incident.

An NDTV report claims that the Pakistan army has opened unprovoked firing along the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir for the eighth consecutive night.

On Thursday night, small arms fire was fired from various Pakistani posts. The target of the firing was Indian posts opposite these areas of Jammu and Kashmir - Kupwara, Baramulla, Poonch, Nowshera and Akhnoor. The Indian army has also retaliated along this 740-km-long border.

The firing comes at a time when tensions between India and Pakistan have reached a peak after 26 people were killed in Pahelgrame  on April 22. The two countries are also taking various punitive measures against each other.

NDTV claims that the Pakistani army has been firing unprovoked at various places along the border since a few hours after India suspended the Indus Waters Treaty on the night of April 24. And on Tuesday, Pakistan expanded the area of ​​firing to the Pargwal sector of the international border, which falls under Jammu district.

That day, the Director General of Military Operations (DGMO) of India and Pakistan spoke on the hotline. In this conversation, Pakistan was warned to stop unprovoked firing, PTI claims.

The day after the Pahelgrame  attack, India took some steps against Pakistan. These included suspending the Indus Waters Treaty, closing the Atari border crossing and announcing a deterioration in diplomatic relations. India claims that the attack is linked to cross-border terrorists.

In response, Pakistan closed its airspace to Indian aircraft and halted all trade with India, even through third countries.

Pakistan also rejected India's announcement to suspend the water treaty and warned that stopping the water would be tantamount to a "declaration of war".


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