The Philippine Star

Thousands throng funeral of indian journalist

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SRINAGAR (AFP) — Thousands of mourners Friday thronged the funeral of a veteran journalist shot dead by unidentifi­ed gunmen on a motorbike outside his office in the main city of Indian Kashmir.

Shujaat Bukhari, a leading journalist and editor of the English-language daily Rising Kashmir, was leaving his office in Srinagar on Thursday evening when three assailants roared up and fired several shots from close range.

Bukhari, 50, was rushed to hospital but was later declared dead. Two of his personal security guards also died.

On Friday, funeral prayers were held at the Jamia Masjid grand mosque in Srinagar before the burial in his native village in northern Kashmir.

Bukhari, who was given police protection following three attacks on him in the past decade, had been a strong advocate of peace in Kashmir.

The Himalayan territory has been divided since the end of British colonial rule in 1947 and both India and Pakistan claim it in full.

New Delhi has about 500,000 soldiers in the part of Kashmir it controls, where armed groups are fighting for independen­ce or a merger with Pakistan.

Bukhari took part in informal peace talks on Kashmir with Pakistani representa­tives in Dubai last year.

His final tweet, sent just a few hours before his murder, was a link to his website’s reporting of the UN human rights chief calling for a major investigat­ion into abuses committed by both India and Pakistan in Kashmir.

 ?? AP ?? A policeman holds the body of journalist Shujaat Bukhari who was murdered in Srinagar on Thursday.
AP A policeman holds the body of journalist Shujaat Bukhari who was murdered in Srinagar on Thursday.

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