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SRINAGAR - Police in Indian Occupied Kashmir have warned residents to build
underground bunkers to prepare for a possible nuclear war in the
disputed region, which is on the edge after a string of deadly border
clashes. The warning comes despite a ceasefire which took hold last week
in the scenic Himalayan region, after the Indian and Pakistani armies
agreed to halt cross-border firing that had threatened to unravel a
fragile peace process. “If the blast wave does not arrive within five
seconds of the flash you were far enough from the ground zero,” says the
notice, headed “Protection against Nuclear, Biological and Chemical
(NBC) Weapons”.
It warns of “initial disorientation” from a nuclear attack, stating the blast may “carry away many prominent and familiar features”. The instructions were issued on Monday in a local English-language newspaper by the State Disaster Response Force, which is part of the police. They vividly describe a nuclear war scenario to prepare residents to deal with “the initial shock wave”. The notice tells them to “wait for the winds to die down and debris to stop falling”. “Blast wind will generally end in one or two minutes after burst and burns, cuts and bruises are no different than conventional injuries. (The) dazzle is temporary and vision should return in few seconds,” it says.
It tells residents to build toilet-equipped basement shelters “where the whole family can stay for a fortnight”, and says that they should be stocked with non-perishable food. Police confirmed they issued the notice but said it “should not be connected with anything else”, in an apparent reference to border tension. An Indian counter-terrorism expert criticised the warning as valueless for Kashmiris, who could be forgiven for imagining war was an imminent prospect.“There can be no conceivable motive for issuing a notice like this,” Ajay Sahni, Executive Director of the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi told AFP.
Pakistan Cyber Force
It warns of “initial disorientation” from a nuclear attack, stating the blast may “carry away many prominent and familiar features”. The instructions were issued on Monday in a local English-language newspaper by the State Disaster Response Force, which is part of the police. They vividly describe a nuclear war scenario to prepare residents to deal with “the initial shock wave”. The notice tells them to “wait for the winds to die down and debris to stop falling”. “Blast wind will generally end in one or two minutes after burst and burns, cuts and bruises are no different than conventional injuries. (The) dazzle is temporary and vision should return in few seconds,” it says.
It tells residents to build toilet-equipped basement shelters “where the whole family can stay for a fortnight”, and says that they should be stocked with non-perishable food. Police confirmed they issued the notice but said it “should not be connected with anything else”, in an apparent reference to border tension. An Indian counter-terrorism expert criticised the warning as valueless for Kashmiris, who could be forgiven for imagining war was an imminent prospect.“There can be no conceivable motive for issuing a notice like this,” Ajay Sahni, Executive Director of the Institute for Conflict Management in New Delhi told AFP.
Pakistan Cyber Force