Eastern Eye (UK)

Indian army admits error of July encounter in Kashmir

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THE Indian army said last Friday (18) its soldiers exceeded their powers during an alleged “fake encounter” operation in Kashmir that killed three men, in a rare admission of wrongdoing in the flashpoint region.

Soldiers deployed by New Delhi have long been accused of abusing their emergency powers in Kashmir. The three men – cousins whom the army claimed were suspected “Pakistani terrorists” – were killed on a counterins­urgency operation on July 18 in the southern Kashmir valley, and buried in remote border area. But their families, who identified their bodies from pictures on social media, said they were local labourers.

The incident generated outrage in Kashmir, with political groups, rights activists and many residents demanding an independen­t probe into the deaths.

Last Friday, army spokesman Rajesh Kalia said the soldiers on the operation had “exceeded” their powers and “contravene­d” the guidelines governing military conduct in Kashmir.

“Disciplina­ry proceeding­s” would be taken against those responsibl­e, Kalia added.

A concurrent police investigat­ion into the killing had yet to establish the involvemen­t of the three men “with terrorism or related activities,” the army statement added.

Police normally accompany soldiers on such operations, although officials said this had not happened on the July operation.

The men’s families say the awaited results of a DNA test ordered as part of the investigat­ion will prove they were local men.

The “fake encounter” revived memories of similar incidents where a three-decade-old separatist insurgency has left tens of thousands of dead. In 2010, three army officers were found guilty of killing three labourers who had been branded as Pakistani infiltrato­rs.

 ??  ?? UNREST: Kashmiris protest in Srinagar last Thursday (17)
UNREST: Kashmiris protest in Srinagar last Thursday (17)

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