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Ten people killed in India-controlled Kashmir clashes

Security forces crack down on protestors in Indian-controlled Kashmir on June 16, 2017. (Photo by AFP)

Separate clashes in Indian-controlled Kashmir have left at least ten people dead as tensions continue in the region.

Authorities said on Friday that the deceased included five policemen, a soldier, two civilians and two suspected militants.

In one incident, suspected militants ambushed a police patrol in the town of Achhabal.

In the ambush, five police officers were killed, according to a top police officer who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity.

The officer added that in a separate incident, soldiers and special forces, who had cordoned off Arwani village on a tip-off that militants were hiding in it, opened fire on villagers who allegedly wanted to help the militants flee.

Two civilians, including a teenage boy, and two suspected militants were killed in the incident, he reported.

In a third incident, an Indian soldier was killed in cross-border shooting.

Pakistani soldiers had allegedly fired shots at Indian posts in southern Naushera along the Line of Control (LoC) dividing Kashmir, killing the Indian soldier, according to an Indian Army spokesman.

Tensions are high in the Indian-administrated Kashmir region where the Muslim majority population stage regular protests against Indian rule and demand greater autonomy from New Delhi.

In order to maintain its grip on the region, New Delhi has deployed hundreds of thousands of troops to enforce a crackdown on dissent.

This image shows security forces taking into custody a Kashmiri government employees taking part in an anti-government protest in Srinagar on June 12, 2017. (Photo by AFP)

New Delhi's iron-fist implementation of strict security measures has prompted an increased number of Kashmir Muslim youths to join resistance movements, according to officials.

The two rival nuclear countries of Pakistan and India both claim the entirety of Kashmir and have fought two wars over the region since their independence from Britain in 1947.  


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