The Borneo Post (Sabah)

India’s top court orders protection for Kashmiris

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NEW DELHI: India’s Supreme Court yesterday ordered bolstered protection for Kashmiris who have faced a violent backlash from a suicide bombing in the troubled territory that killed 40 paramilita­ries.

More than 700 Kashmiri students, workers and traders have returned to the Himalayan region from the rest of India to escape reprisals for the attack, which has escalated tensions with arch-rival Pakistan.

The top court told state government­s and police chiefs to ensure there are no ‘attacks, threats or social boycott’ over the Feb 14 bombing, the worst in the territory in three decades.

Video footage of Kashmiris being taunted or beaten has been widely shared on social media, while right-wing Hindu groups and some TV news channel pundits have encouraged reprisals.

Some Kashmiris have been suspended by Indian universiti­es for their social media comments on the case. Others have been arrested on sedition charges.

“Immediatel­y after the attack, mobs and vigilante groups engaged in vitriolic hate speech and began attacking, and threatenin­g Muslims and Kashmiris throughout the country,” said two activists who sought the Supreme Court action.

Mohammad Yasin Khan, president of Kashmir Traders and Manufactur­ers Federation, told AFP that threats of violence were still being made.

Khan said 300 students from Uttarakhan­d state alone have returned to Kashmir.

Kashmir business groups called for a protest shutdown yesterday by shops and stores in the territory against the ‘continuing threats and intimidati­on’ of Kashmiri people in Indian cities.

The suicide attack was claimed by the Pakistan-based Jaish-eMohammad (JeM) militant group, which has fuelled the Indian anger against Pakistan.

New Delhi has long accused its neighbour of backing JeM and other Kashmiri rebel groups, a charge Pakistan denies. Both claim Kashmir, which has been divided since their independen­ce.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who faces a looming election, is under pressure to take a tough stand on the attack, which was condemned on Thursday by the UN Security Council.

He has vowed the militants ‘will pay a heavy price’.

Another militant was killed during an army raid yesterday north of the Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar, police said.

Analysts say military action is possible, and villagers in Pakistani Kashmir have been told to take precaution­s including building bunkers. — AFP

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 ??  ?? File photo shows Indian soldiers standing guard near the site of suicide bomb attack in Lethpora in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district. — Reuters photo
File photo shows Indian soldiers standing guard near the site of suicide bomb attack in Lethpora in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district. — Reuters photo

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