Arab Times

Crackdown turning some to ‘militancy’

Kashmiris warn India

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SRINAGAR, India, Sept 28, (RTRS): Simmering anger over India’s crackdown on 10 weeks of protests in Kashmir risks drawing more young people to radical rebellion, demonstrat­ors and security officials warn, as the sense of despair and alienation from New Delhi deepens.

In the worst unrest in the disputed Himalayan region for six years, more than 80 civilians have been killed and thousands wounded, a widespread curfew is in place and suspected ringleader­s are being held without charge.

“They are treating us like ‘dons’, like we are criminals,” said Bilal Bhat, a 27-year-old journalist who is active in a local youth civil rights movement. Bhat was taken in by police in August and told to stop posting articles on Facebook. It was the second time he has been held. “When I was beaten by the cop, I cursed myself for taking a pen — I should have taken a gun instead,” he told Reuters.

A conflict that has seeped for decades and spilled into war twice between nucleararm­ed rivals India and Pakistan usually passes little noticed by the internatio­nal community.

But the scale of the violence and security crackdown, and, more recently, a sharp escalation in tension between the neighbouri­ng countries, have made the outside world sit up and pay attention.

India’s security forces have also reinforced their already large presence in Kashmir, drafting in 20,000 paramilita­ries and 10,000 more soldiers.

Bhat

Fire

A senior Home Ministry official said India’s security forces had reduced their use of pellet ammunition, which has drawn widespread condemnati­on, and had been instructed only to fire when they felt directly threatened.

“It is clear that the local Kashmiri youths were being used by Pakistan to attack Indian forces,” the official said, responding to questions from Reuters about the use of force and risk of youth radicalisa­tion.

“It is true that there is a lot of anger among the Kashmiris, but we cannot legitimise their anger if it is for all the wrong reasons.”

India blames Pakistan for a raid earlier this month on a base that killed 18 soldiers, in the deadliest attack on its army in 14 years, prompting Hindu nationalis­t supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to call for revenge.

Several countries, alarmed at the prospect of a military response by India, condemned the attack, while Pakistan denied any involvemen­t.

Journalist Bhat and others see the start of the latest crisis in Kashmir not as the attack on the army camp in Uri on Sept 18, but the killing by Indian security forces of Burhan Wani, a popular separatist militant leader, on July 8.

Stone-throwing protesters took to the streets in a display of support for the slain insurgent that also reflected deep-rooted unease about a central government they say is pursuing a Hindu-nationalis­t agenda to pacify and assimilate India’s only Muslim-majority region.

Many of those killed in the clashes died from shotgun pellets or rifle bullets fired by police and paramilita­ry troops, and the supposedly non-lethal pellet rounds have blinded hundreds of bystanders, including children and women.

“The police are using brute force,” said one protester, a 27-year-old university graduate who works in the private sector and spoke to Reuters at a safe house in the old town of Srinagar, the summer capital of India’s northernmo­st state.

“They are leaving local boys with no choice but to take up arms. You are creating home-grown rebels by your actions — and then you are labelling them as terrorists.” The ophthalmol­ogy ward of Srinagar’s main SMHS hospital is still overflowin­g with patients either partly or fully blinded by pellet rounds fired by police or paramilita­ry troops.

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