Uri, Dec 5: Five Army men and two cops are believed to have been killed in a militant attack near Line of Control (LoC) in Uri sector of Jammu and Kashmir on Friday.
The attack comes just days ahead of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to the state on Dec 8 where he is scheduled to address an election rally.
A senior police officer told a news agency that insurgents attacked an army camp at Mohra near Uri border town early Friday morning.
“A group of two to three militants are believed to have entered the camp where intense firing is going on,” the officer said.
He added that guards of local police officers were also fired at by militants as they approached towards the camp.
The firefight was going on at the time of filing of this report.
Category: Union Territory
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5 Army men, 2 cops killed in militant attack on Kashmir border
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Sand Miners
Miners extract sand from the bed of river Jhelum on an overcast morning in Srinagar on Thursday.
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World Disability Day
Candles are lit by school kids to mark World Disability Day in Srinagar on Wednesday.
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Jaitley in Srinagar
Union Minister and senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley addresses a party function ‘Vision Kashmir’ Peace, Progress and Prosperity’ at SKICC in Srinagar on Wednesday.
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Man who has buried 1,000 ‘martyrs’ in 15 years votes because…
Wasim Khalid
Handwara: He claims to have buried over ‘1,000 martyrs’ during the past 15 years, served jail in 2008 for taking part in pro-freedom protests and was almost booked under the Public Safety Act. Yet, says Parvaiz Tantry , those are exactly the reasons why he voted for the first time in his life on Tuesday.
“I am a diehard azadi supporter,” 36-year old Tantry, head of the five-member committee volunteering for the burial of militants at Jannat-ul-Firdous martyrs’ graveyard, Handwara, said Tuesday. “I along with other committee members have been only burying dead rebels during the past 15 years. How can I forget them?”
“But we have been facing lot of oppression. I was jailed in 2008 by police for participating in pro-freedom demos. I was beaten and tortured. There was nobody to help me. The police was planning to book me under the Public Safety Act (PSA).”
Tantry said his father knocked the doors of a local politician seeking his release. The politician initially refused, he said, but finally agreed to help him. “I realized that I needed the blessing of a powerful politician to escape from the ‘zulm’ (oppression),” Tantry said.
“Today I voted for the same politician in this election,” Tantry said. “I know election is detrimental for the Kashmir cause. But I am helpless.”
Tantry, who teaches in a private school, said he and his four colleagues have buried 1,000 mutilated bodies in the martyrs’ graveyard. “I remember when we would receive burnt bodies of militants; sometimes we buried limbs only and sometimes broken skulls. It was terrible,” Tantry said. “We have taken the job of burying rebels voluntarily. We would collect animal hides on Eid-ul-Azha and zakat money to perform the last rites of the dead. Many a time army came and threatened us not to bury the dead militants in our graveyard. We resisted. The bodies, mostly unidentified, were probably of rebels who had come to fight to liberate us. How could we have abandoned them?” -
Symbols of resistance
Mother of Maqbool Bhat coming out of the family’s run-down house at Trehgam in Kupwara on Tuesday. Shaha Begum, like previous years, boycotted the polls today.
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Rushing to vote
Braving winter chill, voters line up outside a polling station at Karnah on Tuesday morning.
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Rape victims cry for justice
Victims of mass rape in twin villages of Kunan and Poshpora protest outside a polling booth in Kupwara. They carried banners and raised slogans demanding justice
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Anti-election protest
Youth throw rocks at an armoured police vehicle at Kaimoh area of Home-Shalibugh constituency in south Kashmir on Tuesday.
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Election Fever
Frail old man coming out of polling station. Having seen many past elections, the man told, ‘i braved odds to make my presence felt.’