Officials recount villager\'s starring role on day of India-Pak aerial combat

Officials recount villager's starring role on day of India-Pak aerial combat

Press Trust of India  |  Jammu 

Something has fallen from the sky, a villager told an in Bhudal in and Kashmir's Peer Panjal range on February 27, giving forces the clue they were looking for to establish that had used an jet to attack India, officials recounted on Friday.

Officials also disclosed that the Air Force fired 11 bombs at six military targets in Rajouri area in which a girl received

February 27, the day after the strike on a in Balakot in Pakistan's province, is when aerial combat broke out between and Pakistan for the first time since 1971.

"Kuch mila hai. Aasman se kuch gira hai. Humare ek aadmi ko lagi bhi (We have found something and it fell from sky. One of our persons is injured)," a villager is believed to have told an posted in a camp in Bhudal.

As tensions ran high along the Line of Control, a team was sent to see what had fallen from the sky, an said, recounting events as they unfolded that dramatic day.

The team gathered the parts and returned to base in the area. It was handed over to officials, who knew that they had struck a jackpot, he recalled.

The parts were that of Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missiles (AMRAAM) which can be fired only from an aircraft.

The injured person, according to officials, is out of danger and his identity as well as that of the informer is being kept under wraps for security reasons.

shared the details of the AMRAAM with the as well.

While Pakistan claims no jets were used, the has said is seeking more information from Pakistan on the potential misuse of American-made F-16 fighter jets by it against in violation of the end-user agreement.

PAF fired two AMRAAMs on February 27, officials here said. One fell at Bhudal and other hit an IAF Bison that led to the capture of Wing by the

The IAF pilot, who was released on March 1, fell four kilometres inside Pakistan occupied Kashmir, the officials said.

The soil from the crater caused by the bombs that fell in Rajouri has been taken by the officials for a forensic study of the bombs used by the PAF, they said.

Fourteen of 51 villages in Bhudal, about 250 km from and 200 km from Jammu, are close to the LoC.

Tensions between India and Pakistan escalated after a suicide bomber of Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) killed 40 CRPF personnel in and Kashmir's district in February 14.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, March 08 2019. 18:15 IST