
Indian and Pakistan troops swap intense artillery fire overnight
In Pakistan, an unusually intense night of artillery exchanges left at least four civilians dead and wounded 12 others in areas near the Line of Control that divides Kashmir, local police official Adeel Ahmad said.
People in border towns said the firing continued well into Friday morning.
The back-and-forth shelling between India and Pakistan killed at least five civilians (Dar Yasin/AP)
'We're used to hearing exchange of fire between Pakistan and India at the Line of Control, but last night was different,' said Mohammad Shakil, who lives near the frontier in Chakothi sector.
In India, military officials said Pakistani troops barraged their posts overnight with artillery, mortars and gunfire at multiple locations.
They said Indian soldiers responded, triggering fierce exchanges until early dawn.
A woman was killed and two other civilians were injured in the Uri sector, police said, taking the civilian death toll in India to 17 since Wednesday.
Tensions between the nuclear-armed rivals have soared since an attack on a popular tourist site in India-controlled Kashmir left 26 civilians dead, mostly Hindu Indian tourists, on April 22.
New Delhi has blamed Pakistan for backing the attack, an accusation Islamabad rejects.
On Wednesday, India conducted airstrikes on several sites in Pakistani territory it described as militant-related, killing 31 civilians according to Pakistani officials. Pakistan said it shot down five Indian fighter jets.
On Thursday, both countries reported drone attacks that the other swiftly denied. These incidents could not be independently confirmed.
A Kashmiri man using mobile light during blackout is seen after residents of the city of Jammu reported hearing explosions and sirens (Mukhtar Khan/AP)
Panic also spread during an evening cricket match in northern Dharamsala city, where a crowd of more than 10,000 people had to be evacuated from the stadium and the game called off, according to an Associated Press photographer.
Meanwhile, several northern and western Indian states, including Punjab, Rajasthan, Indian-controlled Kashmir, shut schools and other educational institutions for two days.
Airlines in India have also suspended flight operations from two dozen airports across northern and western regions.
India's Civil Aviation Ministry confirmed in a statement the temporary closure of 24 airports on Thursday.
The impact of the border flare-up was also seen in the Indian stock markets.
In early trade on Friday, the benchmark Sensex tanked 662 points to 79,649 while Nifty 50 declined 215 points to trade at 24,058.
As fears of military concentration soar and worried world leaders call for de-escalation, the US Vice President JD Vance has said that a potential war between India and Pakistan would be 'none of our business'.
'What we can do is try to encourage these folks to de-escalate a little bit, but we're not going to get involved in the middle of war that's fundamentally none of our business and has nothing to do with America's ability to control it,' Mr Vance said in an interview with Fox News.
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