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First lull in Kashmir since latest escalation

Villagers used calm in Pakistani Kashmir to leave their homes in Chakoti area



Pakistani soldiers stand next to what Pakistan says is the wreckage of an Indian fighter jet shot down in Pakistan controled Kashmir at Somani area in Bhimbar district near the Line of Control on February 27, 2019.
Image Credit: AFP

Muzaffarabad, Pakistan: Residents near the disputed boundary in divided Kashmir region said Sunday it was quiet overnight, their first lull since a dangerous escalation between Pakistan and India erupted last week bringing the two nuclear-armed rivals close to full-out war.

Many villagers used the calm in Pakistani Kashmir to leave their homes in Chakoti area along the so-called Line of Control (LoC), the demarcation line that divides the troubled Himalayan region on an Indian and a Pakistani sector, and move to safety.

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Nazakat Hussain said his and many other families have no underground shelters or bunkers on their land to protect them and have no other option but to leave.

The rough cold weather and snow, along with the cross-border shooting, prevented them from leaving earlier.

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200

families have taken shelter in government buildings, officials say

Pakistani government official Moazzam Zafar said some 200 families have already taken shelter in three large government buildings in the territory.

Shelter

Zafar said the authorities were providing warm clothing, bedding, food and medicines, and would establish more such camps.

At least eight civilians and two soldiers have been killed in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir since tensions soared following India’s air strike last Tuesday inside Pakistan that New Delhi said targeted militants behind a February 14 suicide bombing in Indian Kashmir that killed 40 Indian troops.

Pakistan retaliated, shooting down a fighter jet on Wednesday and detaining its pilot, who was returned to India on Friday. India, in turn, on Saturday handed over the body of a Pakistani civilian prisoner beaten to death by inmates in a jail in India last week. The man, Shakir Ullah, was buried later Sunday in his home village of Sialkot in Punjab province.

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Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan practically since their independence from British rule in 1947. The two countries each claim Kashmir in its entirety and have fought two of the three wars between them over it.

The rivals struck a cease-fire deal in 2003 but regularly violate it and trade cross-border fire.

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