Arnia border (Jammu), Jan 19: Blood splattered compounds, smashed window panes and demolished roofs are all that are left of houses in border hamlets which have been battered in Pakistani firing and shelling in the last three days.
A smell of gunpowder lingers in these villages whose residents are living in fear. Nine people, including 5 civilians, have been killed and 47 injured in ceasefire violations over last three days. “We were living in the shadow of death. Mortar bombs were raining on our houses and we thought we would die any moment but the police brought us out from the Sai Khurd village in Arnia,” Ratno Devi said.
In Sai Khurd, several houses were damaged and some animals killed in shelling, Devi said, adding that a woman, was killed while her husband and son were injured. Ratno Devi, who along with six family members left home and took shelter in the house of her relatives in the outskirts of Arnia belt, said firing must stop.
The firing and shelling were so heavy that 82 mm mortar shells landed much beyond Arnia town which is 5 km away from the International Border (IB) in Jammu district. Farmlands have craters due to mortar bombs and have turned into live minefields. In Jhora farm in RS Pura, 150 khullas or mud houses of Gujjars were burned down in the shelling.
Several bovines were killed and injured due to mortar bombs and bullets in these villages. Police vehicles have been pressed into service and people living in border hamlets evacuated. “The border hamlets have virtually turned into war zones. Pakistan is targeting civilian areas intensely. There has been huge damage to houses and a loss of cattle,” Sub Divisional Police Officer RS Pura, Surinder Choudhary, said.
Chanchalo Devi said the firing and shelling by Pakistan was haunting them. “Only three months back, Pakistan caused huge damage and again we are facing death. How long will we keep living in fear. The government should give us safe alternatives,” she said.
Chanchalo Devi said she and her husband had woken by the sounds of mortar shells in Arnia’s ward number 13 and they immediately tried to shift to a neighbour’s house as their house is made of mud.
“When we were about to cross the lane to move to our neigbour’s house when a shell burst and injured both of us and our neighbour Darshan Lal,” she said in a hospital. Desh Raj of Vidhipur said his family lived in a room without food and water until they left home to escape the shelling and firing. Arnia town, which was once considered to be safe from Pakistani firing and shelling, was also hit by several mortar bombs.
PTI