2 civilians die in 'unprovoked' cross-LoC firing; Indian post damaged in Pakistani response: ISPR.

Byline: Naveed Siddiqui and Tariq Naqash

A teenager was among two civilians killed in Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) after Indian border troops resorted to "unprovoked" firing across the Line of Control, the military's media wing said on Thursday.

The firing in Jura sector along the LoC also left two people including a woman injured, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement.

The deceased were identified as 14-year-old Shaharyar and Naveed, aged 29 - both residents of Lesva village.

"Pakistan Army troops effectively responded to target [the] Indian post firing on civilian population," the ISPR said, adding that three Pakistan Army soldiers were also injured in the subsequent exchange of fire between the posts.

According to the military's media wing, the Indian border post was damaged and Indian troops were "seen evacuating their casualties".

The casualties occurred in the lower belt of Neelum Valley, a day after Indian Army Chief Gen Bipin Rawat said that the situation along the restive LoC could "escalate any time".

Read: Indian army chief's statement an attempt to divert attention from protests against citizenship law: ISPR

'Earlier, it was [military] post to post firing between the two sides but after 3:30pm, Indian troops started lobbing shells on civilian-populated areas,' Akhtar Ayub, a disaster management officer in Athmuqam, district headquarters of Neelum Valley, told Dawn.

He said two to three mortar shells fell in Lesva village, around two kilometres off the main Neelum Valley road, injuring three civilians - Shaharyar, Naveed and his sister Komal, 14.

All three were evacuated to a nearby military-run health facility where Shaharyar succumbed to his wounds shortly afterwards while Naveed passed away on the way to Muzaffarabad, he added.

In Barian village, a 15-year-old boy, Hammad Ahmed, also sustained injuries due to Indian firing. He was under treatment at district headquarters hospital Athmuqam.

A police official in the area told Dawn that due to Indian shelling, the movement of vehicles on the main road was stopped to avert any further losses. However, traffic was allowed to move after sunset, he said.

Strongly condemning what he called...

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