Chattanooga Times Free Press

Kashmir police say thousands detained in status-change sweep

- BY AIJAZ HUSSAIN

SRINAGAR, India — Thousands of people, mostly young male protesters, have been arrested and detained in Indianadmi­nistered Kashmir during an ongoing communicat­ions blackout and security lockdown imposed more than two weeks ago in an attempt to curtail unrest after a change to Kashmir’s decades-old special status, according to high-ranking Kashmir police officials and police arrest statistics reviewed by The Associated Press.

At least 2,300 people have been detained in the Himalayan valley, the statistics show. Those arrested include anti-India protesters as well as pro-India Kashmiri leaders who have been held in jails and other makeshift holding facilities, according to the police officials, who have access to all police records but spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to talk to reporters and feared reprisals from their superiors.

The latest crackdown began just before Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t-led government stripped Jammu and Kashmir of its semi-autonomy and its statehood, creating two federal territorie­s. Thousands of additional troops have flooded into the Kashmir Valley, already one of the world’s most militarize­d regions, to man steel- and barbedwire checkpoint­s. Telephone communicat­ions, cellphone coverage, broadband internet and cable

TV were cut, but have been gradually restored in some places.

Despite the clampdown, Kashmiris have staged near-daily protests since the Aug. 5 order revoking Kashmir’s special status, which was instituted shortly after India achieved independen­ce from Britain in 1947. The three police officials said about 300 protests and clashes against India’s tighter control over Kashmir have taken place in recent weeks.

One of the officers said most of the arrests have been in Srinagar, Kashmir’s main city and the urban heart of a 30-yearold movement to oust Hindu-majority India from Muslim-majority Kashmir so that it can exist independen­tly or be merged with Pakistan.

The official spokesman, Rohit Kansal, has repeatedly refused to divulge any details about arrests and detentions, saying only that they have been made to prevent anti-India protests and clashes in the region.

Nearly 100 people have

been arrested under the Public Safety Act, the arrest statistics showed. The law permits detaining people for up to two years without trial.

At least 70 civilians and 20 police and soldiers have been treated for injuries sustained in the clashes at three hospitals in Srinagar, the officers said.

Moses Dhinakaran, a spokesman for the Central Reserve Police Force which now holds jurisdicti­on in Kashmir, said he didn’t know how many people had been detained because his agency has “no direct role in detention.”

Families crowded outside police stations waiting for a turn to appeal for the release of their sons, husbands and other relatives on Tuesday.

At least three dozen men and women along with their children sat on the street outside a police station in Srinagar waiting to hear about some 22 young men and teenage boys who they said had been detained by police and paramilita­ry soldiers in a nocturnal raid in one neighborho­od.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MUKHTAR KHAN ?? Kashmiri youth Gulam Rasool Bhat shows pellet wounds on his body inside his home in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, on Tuesday.
AP PHOTO/MUKHTAR KHAN Kashmiri youth Gulam Rasool Bhat shows pellet wounds on his body inside his home in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, on Tuesday.

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