Anti-India feelings run deep in Kashmir, where about a dozen rebel groups have been fighting against Indian rule since 1989. More than 65,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed. The rebel groups have largely been suppressed by Indian troops in recent years, and resistance is now principally expressed through street protests. Indian forces also used tear gas and pellet guns to quell thousands of stone-throwing protesters who took to the streets after the special Eid prayers in Srinagar.
Dozens of protesters, police and paramilitary officers were injured in
the clashes, another police officer said. Indian forces
imposed an indefinite curfew Friday in a town in the Indian portion of Kashmir
after firing tear gas and warning shots to disperse groups of Muslims and
Hindus who clashed during Eid celebrations, police said.
The
army began enforcing the curfew as rival groups attacked each other with stones
and sticks, and burned several shops and vehicles in Kishtwar, a town 200
kilometers (125 miles) southeast of Srinagar, the main city in
Indian-controlled Kashmir. Several people were hurt in the clashes, said one
police officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to
talk to reporters. The trouble erupted after Hindus objected to Muslims shouting raising
pro-independence slogans on the Eid al-Fitr holiday, which caps the fasting
month of Ramadan.
State Home Minister Sajad Ahmed Kitchloo, who is from the area, escaped
unhurt when his motorcade was attacked with stones by the clashing groups.
The
state director-general of police, Ashok Prasad, said "the situation is
serious and our priority is not to allow the situation to escalate.... We are
trying to enforce the curfew strictly."
The
protesters chanted "We Want Freedom," and "Down with India"
as they marched through the streets of Srinagar. The injured included 19 police and paramilitary
soldiers, said Kishore Prasad, a spokesman for the Central Reserve Police
force. Several separatist leaders
were put under house arrest on Thursday night to stop them from leading the
protests ahead of the holiday, and shops and businesses were closed in the
region.
Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan. They have fought two
wars over its control since they won independence from Britain in 1947. The
Indian portion of Kashmir is the only Muslim majority state in a predominantly
Hindu country.
Kashmiri Pandits demand CBI probe into Kishtwar violence
Several Kashmiri Pandit organisations
today condemned the communal violence in Kishtwar and demanded a CBI probe.
All Parties
Migrants Coordination Committee (APMCC), a conglomerate of several displaced
Kashmiri Pandit outfits, lashed out Minister of State for Home Sajjad Kitchloo,
the local MLA and accused the district administration of inaction.
“We strongly condemn the Kishtwar
communal violence triggered due to the inaction of district administration and
demand immediate dismissal of Kitchloo and ordering of CBI probe into the
circumstances that lead to large scale violence in Kishtwar district
yesterday,” the APMCC Chairman Vinod Pandit said in a statement here.
The APMCC demanded action
against senior police officers and questioned why the government “had not
bothered to issue a single press statement even after such large scale
violence”.
APMCC general secretary Arun
Kandroo demanded providing weapons to the minorities in Kishtwar for their
safety and strengthening of Village Defence Commitees (VDC) with communication
system.
No comments:
Post a Comment