ISLAMABAD,
May 26 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Fears of war between the
two nuclear-armed countries, Pakistan and India, escalated Sunday, May
26, as Islamabad test fired a second surface-to-surface missile
despite international calls for calm.
The
missile tested Sunday was a newly-developed short range Hatf-III
(Ghaznavi) capable of carrying warheads up to 290 kilometers (180
miles) with great accuracy, an official statement said, Agence
Farnce-Presse (AFP) reported.
Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf, whose government has announced a series of
missile tests through to Tuesday, May 28, "congratulated the team
of officers and men on their outstanding success", the statement
said.
On
Saturday, May 25, Pakistan test-fired a nuclear-capable medium-range
Hatf-V (Ghauri) that could strike targets deep inside India as
Musharraf said the country was ready for war, although it did not want
conflict.
"We
do not want war but we are not afraid of war. We are ready for war.
Let no-one have any misunderstanding about this," he told an
Islamic conference in the capital, drawing loud applause from the
audience.
Indian
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee brushed off the first test
Saturday, saying it was not "significant", but warned there
was a limit to India's tolerance of cross-border raids launched by
militants from Pakistan into India.
"Our
patience is not limitless," Vajpayee told reporters in the
northern Indian hill station of Manali where he is on a three-day
break.
 |
| A Pakistani army vehicle carries the long-range Ghauri missile, which was test-fired Saturday |
In
a swift reaction to Sunday's test, New Delhi said it was "not
impressed" with Pakistan's testing. "We are not impressed by
this. It has been done for demonstrative effect keeping in view the
domestic audience," Indian defense spokesman P.K. Bandyopadhyay
said.
Pakistan
and India have around a million troops massed on their border and have
been exchanging bellicose statements and artillery fire in the
disputed Himalayan state of Kashmir for the past week.
The
stand-off began in December when India blamed Pakistan for an attack
on its parliament, and escalated on May 14 when 35 people were killed
in a massacre in Kashmir, which New Delhi again blamed on Islamabad.
The
threat of war has drawn intense international pressure on the two
capitals, and concern deepened when Pakistan said it would conduct a
series of missile tests from Saturday through Tuesday.
Pakistan
said the tests were routine and had "nothing to do with the
current situation", but analysts say they are a clear flexing of
muscles by the smaller state after threatening comments by its giant
neighbor.
U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell described the first test as
"disappointing" and called on the neighbors to pause and
"reflect" on the brewing conflict.
"I
don't think it was a useful thing to do now," he said in the
Russian city of Saint Petersburg where U.S. President George W. Bush
held a summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Putin
said Russia also regretted the missile test, and offered to mediate
between the Pakistani and Indian leaders at a June 3-5 conference in
Kazakhstan.
"I
hope they will come, so that we can discuss the matter here and
prevent the further escalation of the conflict," he said.
Meanwhile,
Pakistani and Indian troops traded heavy fire along their disputed
border in Kashmir Sunday, but there were no reports of casualties on
the Pakistan side, officials said.
The
exchange of fire took place in Samahni sector in southern-most
Bhimbher district, which faces Nowshera sector in the Indian
administered zone of the Himalayan state.
"Indians
are heavily shelling Samahni sector villages but we are yet to receive
any information about human casualties," an administration
official told AFP from Bhimbher.
"Pakistani
troops are returning the unprovoked fire by the enemy," he added.
The
official said firing continued intermittently overnight but the
intensity of the bombardment rose by early morning.
Samahni
and adjoining Chumb sector have witnessed artillery duels for the past
several days, killing three and forcing thousands of people in forward
locations to flee and take shelter on safer ground.
Indian
shelling has killed at least 31 civilians in Pakistan-controlled
Kashmir since earlier this month.
On
the other side of the Line of the Control (LoC), 15 Indians have been
killed, including five overnight in R.S. Pora sector.
Hostilities
flared in the wake of an attack in Jammu, the winter capital of Indian
Kashmir, which left 35 dead - mostly women and children.
The
attack, which India blamed on Pakistan-based militants, raised
tensions between the neighbors who already have around a million
troops massed on the border.