The Indian security forces and other associated powers are ‘battling’ gunmen who apparently ‘stormed’ a police station in northern Punjab state, close to the border with Pakistan.
The attackers first hijacked a car, then opened fire at a bus station before entering a police station in Gurdaspur district, officials said. Four people have been killed and at least six wounded. The attackers are believed to be from Indian-administered Kashmir, a senior policeman told the AP news agency. Onlookers state that police were exchanging gunfire with the attackers who have occupied the police barracks.
Such assaults are common in the restive Indian-administered Kashmir, but attacks in neighbouring Punjab are extremely rare. Security forces have been sent to the area as reinforcements. A local police spokesman told the AFP news agency that at least one of the dead was a police officer. Details regarding the same are still emerging.
The state-run All India Radio said four to five armed men had “fired upon a bus, injuring some passengers” at the bus station. “We are also not sure if the attackers inside the police station are holding some hostages. It is a live, developing situation,” local police spokesperson Rajvinder Singh remarked.
Bombs had been found on the railway tracks at the Dinanagar railway station, according to Indian media. Indian media reports said the police station was close to the border with Pakistan, and that the unidentified attackers came dressed in military uniform.
In April 2010, two policemen and two militants were killed in a gun battle in Gurdaspur near the border with Pakistan.
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