The Asian Age

Trouble in Valley again over schoolboy’s death

Strike called by a group of separatist­s brings life to standstill

- YUSUF JAMEEL

Kashmir was tense on Friday. A strike called by an alliance of separatist organisati­ons threw life out of gear in summer capital Srinagar and most other parts of the Valley.

Shops and other businesses remained shut and only skeleton transport services were available on select routes. The trains services remained suspended too on the second consecutiv­e day. At places including in Srinagar and north-western town of Sopore, irate crowds of youth clashed with security forces which fired teargas canisters and shotgun pellets to quell the stonehurli­ng mobs.

The tensions heightened following the death of three militants and two civilians, including a 15year-old schoolboy Aamir Nazir Wani, in or during security forces actions at two different places in southern Pulwama and northern Bandipore districts. J&K’s director general of police Shesh Paul Vaid said the killing of militants was a “major breakthrou­gh” against outlawed Lashkar-etayyaba and Hizb-ulMujahide­en outfits and claimed that the slain men were involved in killing of security officials and mainstream political activists besides bank robberies.

Chief minister Mehbooba Mufti expressed deep anguish and grief over the schoolboy’s killing. While extending her sympathies to the bereaved, she said, “It is highly unfortunat­e that youth are caught in the vicious cycle of violence in the State which has consumed so many precious lives and left behind a trail of death and destructio­n”.

The police said he was hit by a “stray bullet” during

a fire fight with militants in Pulwama’s Pandgampor­a village. The locals alleged that the security forces fired live ammunition indiscrimi­nately during the protests near the encounter site.

On Friday, hundreds of mourners braving chill and snowfall attended the funeral of slain militant Mushtaq Ahmed Seer in Bandipore’s Malangam area.

 ?? — AP ?? Kashmiri people shout pro-freedom slogans as they carry the coffin of slain militant Mushtaq Ahmed during his funeral procession in Malangam, 75 km north of Srinagar, on Friday.
— AP Kashmiri people shout pro-freedom slogans as they carry the coffin of slain militant Mushtaq Ahmed during his funeral procession in Malangam, 75 km north of Srinagar, on Friday.

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