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Military

SLUG: 2-309128 India Kashmir (L-O)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=10/28/03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

NUMBER=2-309128

TITLE=INDIA/KASHMIR (L-ONLY)

BYLINE=ANJANA PASRICHA

DATELINE=

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: In Indian Kashmir, at least two soldiers have been killed and more than 40 people - mostly civilians - have been injured in two separate attacks by suspected Islamic militants. As Anjana Pasricha reports from New Delhi, Muslim separatists are vowing to intensify attacks during the holy month of Ramadan.

TEXT: One of the attacks targeted the main telegraph office in the heart of Kashmir's summer capital Srinagar. Deputy Inspector General, M-A Shah, says dozens of people were in the office paying their telephone bills.

/// SHAH ACT IN HINDI, EST & FADE ///

Mr. Shah is telling reporters that a grenade hit the roof of the telegraph office, then fell to the ground.

Police officials say the grenade was probably meant to hit a large security bunker situated outside the office - but missed its target and wounded about more than two dozen people, mostly civilians.

/// SFX PEOPLE SHOUTING ///

Television pictures showed people wounded and bleeding as others rushed to get help.

In a second attack in Kashmir's Doda district, army soldiers traveling in a convoy were hit by a landmine blast that killed at least two and wounded nearly 10.

India's only Muslim-majority province was observing the first day of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. The attacks coincided with threats from the Pakistan-based Laskhar-e-Taiba militant group to increase attacks during Ramadan.

In a statement to the daily newspaper Greater Kashmir, the group's spokesman Abu Huziafa, warned people to keep away from security installations to avoid being hit in attacks.

The Laskhar-e-Taiba is one of more than a dozen armed Muslim separatist groups waging an insurgency to separate Kashmir from India.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, but claimed in its entirety by both. The nuclear rivals have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir and nearly started a fourth one last year.

The two sides have been searching for ways to repair relations, with India last week offering to mend transport links and restore sporting ties. It also offered to open a top-level dialogue with Kashmir's main separatist alliance, the All Party Huriyat Conference.

Pakistan is objecting to the Indian proposal to talk to the Kashmir separatists, saying that any discussions that do not include Pakistan are bound to fail.

Indian Kashmir has turned into a war-zone since 1989, when New Delhi deployed tens-of-thousands of troops in the region to fight the Muslim insurgents. More than 40-thousand people have died in the fighting. (SIGNED)

NEB/HK/AJ/MH/RAE



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