SRINAGAR, India (AP) The Indian army said Wednesday its troops have been battling for days against dozens of armed rebels who crossed the heavily militarized border from the Pakistan-controlled portion of the disputed Kashmir region into Indian-held territory.
The fighting in which the Indian army said 12 militants had died in nine days could complicate efforts by the Indian and Pakistani leaders to defuse tensions over their countries' rival claims to the Himalayan territory.
After decades of conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbors, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan's Nawaz Sharif agreed Sunday in talks in New York that attacks in the region needed to stop. But while the Pakistani premier called the meeting a chance for a "new beginning," his Indian counterpart demanded that terrorist activity emanating from Pakistan cease before long-stalled peace talks could be resumed.
Lt. Gen. Gurmeet Singh, an Indian army commander in Kashmir, said soldiers first encountered up to 40 rebels on Sept. 24 in the abandoned village of Shala Bhata, near the U.N.-drawn Line of Control that divides the Kashmir region.
"There is no question of our territory being taken over," he said, but denied Indian media reports that Pakistani soldiers had occupied the village or any military outposts there.