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HomeNewsIndia NewsDr Singh opens India’s biggest rail tunnel in Kashmir visit

Dr Singh opens India’s biggest rail tunnel in Kashmir visit

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PRIME Minister Dr Manmohan Singh on Wednesday (June 26) opened the country’s longest railway tunnel during a rare visit to troubled Indian Kashmir, which has been marred by one of the deadliest militant attacks on soldiers in years.

 

Dr Singh inaugurated a stretch of line that runs through the 11km long tunnel, part of an ambitious multi-year railway project in the region, as he wrapped up his first visit to the region in three years.

 

“It took seven years to complete,” Dr Singh said of this section of the project, during a speech in the town of Banihal, some 110km from the main city of Sriningar.

 

It is the first time the premier has visited the Indian-controlled part of the divided Himalayan territory – which has been the scene of two wars with Pakistan – since June 2010 and comes less than a year before India goes to the polls.

 

During Dr Singh’s visit, Pakistani troops fired across the borders twice in an hour, an Indian army spokesman said, dubbing it a breach of a ceasefire pact between the estranged neighbours.

 

“This morning Pakistani troops fired at out positions in the Poonch sector. Our side retaliated with small arms (fire),” Colonel Rajesh Kalia told reporters.

 

He added troops also engaged up to three heavily-armed cross-border militants in a firefight in Indian Kashmir’s frontier Rajouri district.

 

Also on Wednesday, suspected Muslim militants shot dead a man in the Kashmiri town of Sopore, police said.

 

On the eve of Dr Singh’s trip on Monday (June 24), militants ambushed a convoy of troops on the outskirts of Srinagar, killing eight soldiers and wounding 13 others. It was the deadliest such attack since July 2008 when a landmine killed nine soldiers on a bus, also on the outskirts of Srinagar.

 

The tunnel and railway stretch have been added to a train line running through the valley, part of a 20-billion-rupee ($470m/£307.43m) project that will eventually link Kashmir to the rest of India’s vast railway network.

 

Sections of the track have been drilled through the Himalayan mountains, and Dr Singh said it was a “national dream” to link Kashmir with the network by 2018.

 

Dr Singh faced protests when he arrived in Kashmir on Tuesday (June 25) after the region’s three main separatist groups called a strike against his visit.

 

Shops and other businesses, along with schools, banks and offices were closed throughout Srinagar and security forces were deployed in strength.

 

More than a dozen armed rebel groups have been fighting Indian forces since 1989 for the region’s independence or its merger with Pakistan and tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians have died in the fighting.

 

Armed violence had been declining steadily since the early 2000s but the region has been tense following the execution in February of a local man over a deadly 2001 attack on the national parliament in New Delhi.

 

Mohammed Afzal Guru’s execution, carried out in a New Delhi prison without first informing his family, triggered widespread protests in Kashmir where many doubted his guilt.

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