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Indian Army destroyed a live Pakistani shell near a village in the border area of ​​Jammu and Kashmir

Poonch: In Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian Army’s bomb disposal team detonated a live Pakistani shell close to a border settlement. To protect the residents, the live shell was set to the side of the road and demolished.

Indian army
Indian army

According to Mohammad Mashuk, the army was eliminating Pakistan’s live shells with “tremendous” efficiency. According to him, the live shell that was present in Dara Bagyal posed a hazard to all of the locals, but that concern has now been avoided.

“I would like to state that the Indian army is doing well across Poonch. There is a ‘basti’ close by, and the live shell was found on the side of the road. But it was demolished by the army men. It posed a serious risk to us, particularly to those who follow this route.

According to a resident of Poonch’s Dara Bagyal, “A bomb that originated in Pakistan was destroyed by the army. Because of this, we were afraid and in danger. They destroyed the device, and for that I am grateful.”

In the meanwhile, residents of Jammu and Kashmir’s border districts have sustained severe damage as a result of Pakistan’s heavy bombardment during the recent war. The current confrontation between India and Pakistan, which has paused after both nations reached an agreement to cease hostilities, put locals in these regions first in the line of fire.

The lives of those who live in villages close to the border, however, have been severely impacted by the shelling from Pakistan; their homes have been destroyed or are in such poor shape that they are no longer livable.

An elder from a Rajouri hamlet named Muhammad said that when shells struck his home, the whole structure collapsed. Since his family had nowhere to go, he pleaded with the authorities to provide them tents and other aid.
In border regions like Nowshera, residents have reportedly experienced damage to their houses, animals, and basically their means of subsistence.

Surinder Choudhary, the deputy chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, visited border villages in Rajouri district close to the Line of Control last week and spoke with locals who had been impacted by recent fighting.

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