Indian soldier kills colleagues, himself

Indian army soldiers patrol outside their base camp at Safapora, outskirts of Srinagar, India, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2014. An Indian soldier fired indiscriminately at his colleagues after an altercation at an army camp in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir on Thursday, killing five of them before fatally shooting himself, officials said.(AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)

Indian army soldiers patrol outside their base camp at Safapora, outskirts of Srinagar, India, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2014. An Indian soldier fired indiscriminately at his colleagues after an altercation at an army camp in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir on Thursday, killing five of them before fatally shooting himself, officials said.(AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)

Published Feb 27, 2014

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Srinagar, India - An Indian soldier shot dead five colleagues before killing himself on Thursday, an army official said, in what investigators said appeared to be a case of stress-related violence in a force dogged by a staffing crunch.

India's armed forces, the world's third largest, struggle to fill thousands of vacancies mainly due to difficult conditions and the high risks involved, according to the Defence Ministry.

“One of the army men ran amok and fired indiscriminately at his colleagues inside an army camp at Safa Pora,” army spokesman Lieutenant Colonel N N Joshi said of the incident in the early hours in the border state of Jammu and Kashmir.

“Five army men died on the spot and one was injured. The army man later shot himself dead using his service rifle.”

Joshi said the army has ordered an inquiry. A senior army officer who declined to be identified said initial investigations suggested the shooter was under stress.

The shooting comes a day after India's navy chief quit after taking responsibility for a string of operational incidents, the latest of which saw smoke sweep a submarine with two officers still missing. A dockside blast in Mumbai killed all 18 aboard another submarine in August.

There were 635 cases of suicide or attempted suicide in the armed forced from 2003 to 2007, all “attributable to increased stress environment leading to psychological imbalance in the soldiers”, a parliamentary committee said in a 2010 report. - Reuters

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