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Attack at India bus terminal injures 35

SRINAGAR, India --Suspected Muslim rebels threw a grenade at a crowded bus terminal in the Indian portion of Kashmir on Friday, wounding 35 people, including seven children, police said.

The suspected separatists hurled a hand grenade at a police and paramilitary patrol near a busy bus stop in Banihal, roughly 75 miles south of Jammu-Kashmir state's main city, Srinagar, said senior police official Hemant Lohia.

At least five people were wounded critically and were rushed to a hospital. Six police and paramilitary officers were wounded, Lohia said.

The Himalayan region of Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed by both in its entirety.

About a dozen rebel groups have been fighting Indian government forces to carve out a separate homeland or to merge Jammu-Kashmir -- India's only Muslim-majority state -- with Pakistan. At least 68,000 people, most of them civilians, have been killed since the start of the rebellion in 1989.

No group claimed responsibility for Friday's attack. 

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