Pakistan shoots down Indian drone as Kashmir tensions rise

A photo taken on March 29, 2020, shows deserted streets during a lockdown in Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian Kashmir. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

ISLAMABAD (AFP) - Pakistan's army said Thursday (April 9) it had shot down a small Indian surveillance drone in Kashmir, as tensions rose over continued cross-border shelling in the disputed territory.

According to a statement from the army media wing, the Indian quadcopter - about the same size as a commercially available hobby drone - had crossed 600m over the de facto border known as the Line of Control (LoC).

"This blatant act was aggressively responded to by Pakistan Army troops shooting down Indian quadcopter," the statement read.

An Indian army spokesman said the drone "is not ours".

The incident came as Pakistan and India accuse each other of violating ceasefire terms at the LoC, with sporadic shelling reported from both sides.

Relations between the nuclear-armed neighbours nosedived in February last year, with India launching an air strike inside Pakistan after accusing its neighbour of harbouring a group that staged a suicide bomb attack that killed 40 Indian paramilitaries in Kashmir.

Pakistan launched its own raid the next day and later shot down an Indian fighter jet and captured its pilot, taking the arch-rivals to the brink of war.

The sky-high animosity between the two countries deescalated after Pakistan returned the downed pilot to India.

Tensions also recently spiked when New Delhi revoked the partial autonomy of Indian Kashmir in August.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since independence in 1947, and has been the spark of two wars and numerous flare-ups between the two foes.

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