Dayton Daily News

India eases restrictio­ns in Kashmir for festival

- By Ashok Sharma

— Authoritie­s in NEW DELHI Indian-administer­ed Kashmir said they eased restrictio­ns in the region’s main city for a third straight day on Sunday ahead of a major Islamic festival, following India’s move to strip the region of its constituti­onal autonomy and impose an indefinite curfew.

More than 250 ATMs were made functional in Srinagar and bank branches opened for people to withdraw money ahead of Monday’s Eid al-Adha festival, city administra­tor Shahid Choudhary said in a tweet.

There was no immediate independen­t confirmati­on of reports by authoritie­s that people were visiting shopping areas for festival purchases, as all communicat­ions and the internet remained cut off for a seventh day.

The New Delhi Television News channel showed video of jeeps fitted with loudspeake­rs moving in the region after lunchtime, telling people to return to their homes and shopkeeper­s to shut markets. NDTV said the move may have been prompted by sporadic clashes that took place in Srinagar after the restrictio­ns were relaxed on Saturday.

Authoritie­s appear to be acting with utmost caution because of a fear of a backlash from residents who have been forced to stay indoors since last Monday. The restrictio­ns were briefly eased for the first time on Friday, when residents were allowed to attend mosque prayers.

The predominan­tly Muslim area has been under the lockdown and near-total communicat­ions blackout to prevent unrest and protests after India’s Hindu nationalis­t-led government said last Monday that it was revoking Kashmir’s special constituti­onal status and downgradin­g its statehood. Thousands of Indian troops have been deployed to the area.

On Saturday, Rahul Gandhi, a leader of India’s main opposition Congress party, said there were reports of violence and “people dying” in the region. Talking to reporters in New Delhi, Gandhi said “things are going very wrong there,” and called for the Indian government to make clear what is happening.

Authoritie­s in Srinagar said Saturday night that there had been instances of stone pelting by protesters but no gun firing by security forces in the past six days. Television images showed cars and people moving in some parts of Kashmir.

State-run All India Radio quoted the region’s top bureaucrat, Chief Secretary B.V.R. Subrahmany­am, as saying that people were coming out of their homes for Eid shopping.

Junior Home Minister G. Kishan Reddy said he expected the situation in Kashmir to become “fully peaceful” in 10-15 days.

He said communicat­ion facilities would be restored in phases. “We have only taken precaution­ary measures with the view that even small incidents should not occur when a major decision has been made,” the Press Trust of India news agency quoted him as saying.

Reddy said there had been occasions in the past when a curfew had continued for weeks at a stretch, but there was no such expectatio­n now.

On Thursday, Modi assured the people of Jammu and Kashmir, as the region is known, that normalcy would gradually return and that the government was ensuring that the current restrictio­ns do not dampen the Islamic festival.

New Delhi rushed tens of thousands of additional soldiers to one of the world’s most militarize­d regions to prevent unrest and protests after Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t-led government announced it was revoking Kashmir’s special constituti­onal status and downgradin­g its statehood. Modi said the move was necessary to free the region of “terrorism and separatism.”

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said Sunday on Twitter that India’s crackdown was an attempt to change the demographi­cs of Kashmir by introducin­g Hindu supremacy to the Muslim-majority area. Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi made similar comments a day earlier.

On Saturday, Pakistan said that with the support of China, it will take up India’s unilateral actions in Kashmir with the U.N. Security Council and may approach the U.N. Human Rights Commission over what it says is the “genocide” of the Kashmiri people.

Kashmir is claimed in its entirety by both India and Pakistan and is divided between the archrivals. Rebels have been fighting New Delhi’s rule for decades in the Indian-controlled portion, and most Kashmiri residents want either independen­ce or a merger with Pakistan.

“When a demographi­c change is made through force, it’s called genocide, and you are moving toward genocide,” Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States