A remote-controlled bomb placed on a roadside blew up an army patrol car in a pre-dawn attack Sunday, killing an army major and 10 other men, police said. The powerful blast in Wachi village hurled the car skyward and left a 10-feet (3-meter) wide crater in the road, police officer Imtiyaz Ahmed told The Associated Press by telephone from the site of the blast. "The car is completely damaged, totally twisted. It was hurled several meters from the crater," Ahmed said. "The bodies of the victims are in pieces. It is a very awful sight." A man claiming to be a spokesman for the Hezb-ul Mujahedeen militant group claimed responsibility for the blast in call to a local news agency, the Central News Service. The car, a private sports utility vehicle being used by the army, was on night patrol when the explosion occurred, Ahmed said. The occupants included the major, eight army soldiers, a police officer and the driver, he said. Wachi village is located 65 kilometers (40 miles) south of Srinagar, the summer capital of India's Jammu-Kashmir state. In the nearby Anantnag district, two militants were holed up in a mosque and engaged in a gunbattle with troopers who had surrounded the building, police said. Firing had continued overnight after the men entered the mosque late Saturday, a police officer said on condition of anonymity. The 14-year insurgency in India's only Muslim-majority state has claimed more than 66,000 lives.