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Indian army convoy ambushed in held Kashmir, three dead

By REUTERS
August 17, 2016

SRINAGAR: Suspected separatists ambushed an Indian military convoy in occupied Kashmir on Wednesday, killing three personnel, in an escalation of violence that officials have blamed on separatist protests that have tied down security forces for more than a month.

Indian-occupied Kashmir is in the midst of the worst unrest in six years that began early last month when security forces killed a young separatist commander who was idolized by some youth, provoking an outpouring of anger.

Police superintendent Imtiaz Hussain said suspected separatists were taking advantage of the unrest to launch attacks on security forces after years of declining violence.

Suspected separatists ambushed an army convoy early on Wednesday in the town of Baramulla, killing two soldiers, and then struck at a police jeep when it arrived, killing one policeman, he said."We were aware about the presence of the militants around Baramulla town for over a month but due to violence across the held Kashmir, they managed to consolidate and carry out an attack," Hussain said.

At least 64 protesters have been killed and thousands injured during 40 days of unrest, while schools, shops, banks and offices remain closed in much of held Kashmir as paramilitary troops patrol main roads, residential areas and mosques.

The turmoil has raised tension with Pakistan which invited India for talks on the disputed territory, drawing an angry rebuke from India.

The nuclear-armed neighbors, which have fought three wars since their independence in 1947, both claim the Muslim-majority Himalayan region in full but rule it in part.

India accuses Pakistan of supporting the separatists fighting Indian forces in held Kashmir while Pakistan accuses India of meddling in Pakistani trouble spots.

On Monday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in an Independence Day address he was getting messages of support from people in Pakistan's Baluchistan province, where separatists are fighting the state.