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  • 6/2/2025
In Poonch, mortar shells rained without warning — striking markets, homes, and lives with brutal indifference. They didn’t ask who was Hindu, Muslim, Sikh, or Christian. A labourer was shot dead just a few feet away, leaving behind six children. A 12-year-old collapsed in a stranger’s arms, drenched in blood. One shell tore through a roof, killing a young boy as his uncle watched, powerless. Elsewhere, shrapnel ripped through the walls of a decades-old seminary, scarring its classroom and killing a beloved teacher.

In Poonch, grief has settled over every street. People speak softly now, their eyes tracing the cracks in the walls. Until recently, a cross-border bus brought stories, culture, and hope. Today, only fear crosses over. The shelling has silenced laughter, splintered routines, and turned familiar corners into warzones.

Reporter: Ishfaq Naseem
Camera: Yasir Iqbal
Editor: Sudhanshu

#Poonch #IndoPakBorder #LOC #IndiaPakistanBorderDispute #IndiaPakistanTensions #IndiaPakistanTies #IndiaPakistanConflict #PahalgamAttack #Shelling #OperationSindoor

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Transcript
00:00In our gate, there was only 2 feet or 3 feet in the case of Pakistan.
00:07And my little brother was healed.
00:20At 1.5 o'clock in the morning, the gate started to get started.
00:25And before we started to understand that
00:27He announced that we are doing a free-free
00:31and we understood that it is a free-free.
00:34But when the rain was in the evening of the evening,
00:39our brothers were in the gate,
00:42there was a bathroom in one foot.
00:44And the kids were in the bathroom.
00:46And the kids were standing at the back of the street
00:48and they were closed.
00:50So at that time,
00:51our gate was in the same way
00:53I was in a 2-foot or 3-foot
00:55on a Pakistani wall
00:57and my little brother was born
00:59and my little brother was born
01:01There were four sons
01:03and two sons
01:05and they were there in a day
01:07and they were able to do their children's day
01:09and they were able to do their children's day
01:11We were all tired
01:13and there was no problem
01:15We were talking about
01:17and we were sitting here
01:19and we were sitting here
01:21is firing on the border. So it was going to be a little bit. I didn't know that the fire will go.
01:29Then there was a blast at 8 o'clock, you can see a blast.
01:35The slag came in the middle of it. It was the upper part of it.
01:42It was the upper part of it. It was destroyed.
01:48It was a splinter, which we call in our hands,
01:55and it was my sister, Amarji Singh, who was retired.
01:59I got it, and I didn't know it.
02:03It hit the eye of the blast, so I didn't know it.
02:07I kept it in the hospital, but when it opened,
02:10it was cut in my mouth.
02:13When it opened, I was scared.
02:15I didn't know what happened.
02:17When he was in front of the other bed, there was only 3-4 doctors.
02:24They had a lot of trouble.
02:26There was no color color or color color.
02:31I also sleep in a little bit here.
02:34When people go up, they come down.
02:40If I say this place, I will have 30,000,000 people.
02:47My brother had a phone.
02:50I was sitting here in the house.
02:52The sound of the phone was not clean.
02:54I was sitting here and talking to him.
02:58This bomb fell down.
03:00My fingers were cut down.
03:02It was blood.
03:04My eyes were closed.
03:06My son was closed.
03:09My son was closed.
03:12My phone was closed.
03:14My son was closed.
03:16My son was closed.
03:19I saw him.
03:20I saw him.
03:21He was dead.
03:22I saw him inside the door.
03:23I saw him inside the door.
03:25I saw him inside the door.
03:26I saw him inside the door.
03:27I said, that he was inside.
03:29They were not talking about the door.
03:31It was dirty.
03:32I was in bed.
03:33I thought I saw him outside.
03:34I saw a blood.
03:36There was water lying in the door.
03:38I scared it went inside the door.
03:39I was like, no matter what it was inside.
03:40I had to see him inside the door.
03:41Then I went inside the door.
03:42I walked right into a window.
03:43He was sitting on a chair.
03:44There was a chair.
03:45It was sent to him outside.
03:46There was a chair.
03:47There was a chair.
03:48There was a chair open and there?
03:49It was outside of the room.
03:50...
03:53...
03:56...
04:01...
04:06...
04:11...
04:18all the racking of the trees, all the trees, all the trees, all the trees, all the trees, all the trees, all the trees.
04:24The loss of the trees, all the trees, all the trees, all the trees.
04:30We never had any idea that something had been so big.
04:33It was always a racking lunch, sometimes it was always a racking lunch.
04:37But we didn't see such big shilling.
04:40Something was wrong, because Modi ji announced that Delhi's death is a grave.
04:45We were preparing for it, because we were living in the border.
04:49When we hit a bomb, we were on the roof.
04:51I understood that the first attack was here.
04:55I understood that if we had these holes in our house,
04:59then we had problems.
05:01We had a disaster here.
05:03There was a disaster in the city.
05:05There was a disaster in the city.
05:07There was a disaster in the hospital.
05:09There was a disaster in one child.
05:11There was no structure.
05:13But in the house I tried to go up and keep treatment in the hospital.
05:17In memory was not a place.
05:18It was a project that were in the middle of the hospital.
05:20There was no such thing.
05:21There was a disaster in the hospital,
05:22but it was not a wilderness.
05:23It was bloodthed and a bloodthed.
05:24Then I had to remember them.
05:25Then I had to borrow my боль.
05:26The doctor, they had to leave a hospital.
05:28Because there were many people who were sitting there,
05:31I had to get in the hospital.
05:33So I had to go through his mouth.
05:34And I think that the last breath of my head was 15-20 minutes,
05:37and I think that the last breath of my head was in my head.
05:45The shock is that when my little brother told me,
05:50that he didn't have a MOLWI.
05:55I think that he was a MOLWI.
05:57He was a big militant.
05:59He was in 19-year-old,
06:01and he didn't know what he did.
06:03He was in 19-year-old,
06:05and my brother told me,
06:06who is in my head?
06:08He said,
06:09that he was a militant.
06:11He was very sad.
06:13He gave me a message for the country.
06:15He gave me a message for the country.
06:17He said,
06:18what was his fault?
06:19The bomb came from Pakistan.
06:21He gave me so much pain.
06:23I think that he was the most saddest thing.
06:26He gave me a message.
06:28He had to do it.
06:30He had to do it.
06:32I think that it is very situation.
06:35He asked me for feedback for him.
06:37I remember pushing us to the position.
06:38Every158th was the king to blame.
06:39Then he asked me for people.
06:40His wife will survive soon.
06:41The house goes for pity.
06:42Here it is for video.
06:43After all,
06:44I took care,
06:45I was Methodist andINTERMS.
06:46He who was going away with me soon.
06:48Amen.
06:49I can't接 my girlfriend.
06:52Here I am The marriage.

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