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India lodges strong protest after rockets fired from Pakistan

India lodged a strong protest with Pakistan over the firing of three rockets from across the border that exploded inside Punjab.

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India today lodged a strong protest with Pakistan over the firing of three rockets from across the border that exploded two kilometres inside Punjab.

The issue was raised at a flag meeting between the BSF and Pakistani Rangers in the wee hours after the missiles landed in open fields in Modhey and Dhoneya Khurd villages in Attari sector on the Indo-Pak border, prompting retaliatory gunfire from the Indian border troops.

There was no damage or casualty on the Indian side due to the Pakistani action last night, BSF iInspector general Himmat Singh said. "We held a flag meeting at about 1 am and made a very strong protest to them (Pakistani Rangers) about this incident," he told reporters here.

"Yesterday night, at about 10 pm, the BSF troops posted at Pulkanjini border outpost saw flashlights and firing from Pakistan territory and after a very short gap, they heard explosions," Singh said.
    
"Our troops on the border retaliated immediately, very strongly...after that no incident of fire from Pakistani side was reported," he said.

"Three rockets were fired from Pakistani side. There was no damage but it raises suspicion about developments on the other side of the border," a BSF official said.

During the meeting, the Rangers "feigned ignorance (about the incident) but said they will look into it," he said. New Delhi suspects that the border incidents were mainly aimed at diverting attention of the Indian forces to push in infiltrators.

In the flag meeting, which was held at the Joint Check Post at the international border in Attari, Commandant HS Dhillon led the BSF delegation while Wing Commander Akbar Bhatt was leading the delegation of Pakistan Rangers.

"The firing from Pakistan may be an attempt to demoralise the villagers as well as newly-deployed woman BSF constables," Baljit Singh, panchayat member of a border village, said.

For the first time in the history of BSF, 16 women constables of the force were deployed yesterday at Rorawali village near Attari border to facilitate frisking of ladies.The step was taken following demands from farmers to let village women pass the barbed fencing wire on the border to their agricultural fields within Indian territory.

Panic-stricken villagers rushed out of their houses and huddled  on roadsides in fear and disbelief. All the four rockets fell on agriculture fields  without hurting any person, said senior officials.

Officially Pakistan Rangers, however, denied any rockets were fired from their side. The 107 MM rockets landed in the fields of Pul Kanjari area near Atari border in Amritsar with a deafening noise.All the four rockets were recovered on Sunday after the BSF teams conducted an intensive search in the area. The rocket shells have been sent for forensic tests to Delhi.

After the attack, BSF troopers fired from machine guns into Pakistan. Officials said seven to eight machine gun bursts were fired from Indian territory. The BSF officials said a stern warning had been served on the Pakistan counterparts for action against those firing rockets on the Indian territory.

“We expect Pakistan to investigate the matter seriously without entering into arguments and counter arguments,” said the BSF DIG.

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