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India's Modi trumpets Kashmir move, but local support is scarce
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi trumpeted his abolition of
Kashmir’s special status in an Independence Day speech on Thursday, but
there was little sign that he had won over people in the region’s
biggest city – and a deadly border clash with Pakistan added to
tensions.
Modi said the constitutional status of Jammu and Kashmir
had encouraged corruption and nepotism, while creating injustice for
women, children and minority communities.
Indian-controlled Kashmir, India’s only majority-Muslim region, is also claimed by Pakistan.
“Today,
every Indian can proudly say ‘One Nation, One Constitution’,” said
Modi, speaking from the ramparts of the historic Red Fort in New Delhi.
Critics say the policy will trigger a backlash from Kashmiris
aggrieved by losing their exclusive right to buy property in the state
and to fill state government jobs.
In a clampdown in the region
over the past 12 days, authorities have cut internet and phone links,
set up numerous roadblocks and detained more than 500 local leaders and
activists.
In Kashmir’s biggest city, Srinagar, India tightened
security further, sealing off many roads with barbed wire for an
Independence Day parade attended by only a few locals.
Outside
the Sher-i-Kashmir cricket stadium where the event was held, the
streets were empty, and inside, there were fewer than 500 spectators,
with helicopters and drones with cameras hovering overhead. A police
official said the stadium could hold at least 2,000.
Satya Pal
Malik, appointed Jammu and Kashmir’s governor by New Delhi, said the
change of status would bring prosperity and development and help to make
the region a hub for tourism and industry.
Stone-throwing continues
He
said Islamist militant recruitment had fallen and incidents of
stone-throwing against security forces after Friday prayers “have all
but ended”.
However, witnesses from several parts of Srinagar have
reported daily stone-throwing, and Reuters correspondents have
witnessed at least two such incidents in the past few days.
On Wednesday, Reuters reporters
met four men who displayed injuries that they said had been caused by
pellets fired by security forces in Srinagar’s Soura neighbourhood.
Srinagar resident Bilal Ahmad, 38, said India’s Independence Day was “a black day for us.”
“Indians
are free but we Kashmiris are yet to get freedom,” he said. “If we had
been independent, we would not have been caged like this.”
There is little sign that the crackdown will ease anytime soon.
Indian
troops detained a Kashmiri reporter working for a local newspaper in an
overnight raid at his house in the Tral area of Pulwama district, his
family said.
Irfan Ahmad Malik, 28, works for Greater Kashmir, the
largest-circulation daily in the Kashmir valley. It was not immediately
clear why he had been detained.
“The troops jumped over the
compound wall of our house last night at around 11:30pm,” said Malik’s
father Mohammad Amin Malik, 57.
A spokesperson for the Jammu and Kashmir government said it was looking into the incident.
On
Thursday there were also signs that the regular shelling between Indian
and Pakistani troops along the contested border that splits Kashmir,
known as the Line Of Control (LOC), was intensifying.
Exchange of fire
Major
General Asif Ghafoor, spokesperson for the Pakistan armed forces,
tweeted that three of its soldiers had died along with five of India’s.
He said India had started the exchange.
But an Indian army
spokesperson said there had been no casualties. In a statement, the
Indian army said Pakistan had begun violating a ceasefire at around 7
a.m.
Pakistan, which claims all of Kashmir, has already cut trade
and transport links and expelled India’s envoy in retaliation for Modi’s
move.
It is also taking the issue to the UN Security Council, which is due to meet on Friday to discuss the issue.
In
February, a suicide bomber belonging to a Pakistan-based Islamist group
killed 40 Indian paramilitary police in Kashmir. India hit back with a
bombing raid into Pakistan and an Indian pilot was shot down over
Pakistan, but then handed back.
Pakistan
observed a ‘Black Day’ on Thursday to coincide with India’s
Independence Day celebrations, and one of the main militant groups
fighting Indian rule in Kashmir led a protest through Pakistan’s part of
the disputed region, Azad Kashmir.
Supporters of the Hizbul
Mujahideen militant group were among more than 1,000 people who marched
through Muzaffarabad holding black flags and shouting anti-India
slogans.
“As long as India continues its occupation of Kashmir, we
will fight within the occupied territory with full force,” Hizbul
Mujahideen’s deputy commander, Saifullah Khalid, told the crowd.
India
has banned Hizbul Mujahideen as a terrorist group. Pakistan allows the
organisation to exist but denies Indian allegations of financial
support.
Pakistani newspapers carried black borders, and
politicians including Prime Minister Imran Khan replaced their social
media pictures with black squares. Flags on government buildings flew at
half-mast.
- Reuters
Credit : malaysiakini.com
Source Link : https://www.malaysiakini.com/news/488168
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