Los Angeles Times

Fear, tension mount in Kashmiri city

Shut off from outside world amid lockdown, residents of Srinagar are ‘in panic mode.’

- By Ahmer Khan and David Pierson Special correspond­ent Khan reported from Srinagar and Times staff writer Pierson from Singapore.

SRINAGAR, India — The boulevard along Dal Lake ordinarily brims with tourists, who come to bask in the commanding views of the snow-capped Zabarwan mountains.

But for the last four days, the thoroughfa­re has been mostly empty and silent. Tourists in this city of sprawling gardens and colorful houseboats have f led — leaving behind more than a million residents, many hunkered in their homes and seized with fear.

Srinagar is the summer capital of what was the semiautono­mous Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. Then on Monday, the Indian government revoked the Muslim-majority state’s decades-old special status and constituti­on in a reorganiza­tion that’s enraged local residents and neighborin­g Pakistan.

Jammu and Kashmir is on the Indian side of the larger disputed Kashmir region, a mountainou­s territory that clips together the northern reaches of India and Pakistan, two bitter nuclear rivals.

The constituti­onal change downgrades Jammu and Kashmir’s statehood to a territory administer­ed by New Delhi. It also fulfills a promise by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t party to rein in a region that’s been the site of decades of violence and opposition to Indian rule. Pakistan responded to the move Wednesday by downgradin­g diplomatic ties with India and suspending bilateral trade. That drew a rebuke from New Delhi, which accused Islamabad of meddling with India’s internal affairs.

Caught in the middle of the dispute are the 5.5 million inhabitant­s of Jammu and Kashmir, including residents of Srinagar who described a city in total lockdown.

A phone and internet blackout rendered mobile devices and landlines inoperable. A 24-hour curfew left streets barren. Checkpoint­s with armed soldiers were set up at seemingly every intersecti­on. Residents pleading to get through to buy food or reach hospitals were often cursed at and met with threats of beatings by troops.

“We have been in panic mode,” said Huzaif Ahmed, a university student who rushed back to Srinagar after the blackout was introduced. The curfew, however, left him stranded at Sheikh ul-Alam Internatio­nal Airport, which was inundated with tourists and Indian migrant workers looking to leave.

Nighttime clashes between residents throwing stones and soldiers shooting pellets have been reported. A 17-year-old boy drowned in a river Monday trying to escape police, according to HuffPost India.

News has been sparse. Local media have been blacked out. Only government officials equipped with satellite phones have been given access to outside communicat­ion. (This article was transmitte­d from New Delhi because of the internet blackout in Kashmir.)

In interviews, soldiers in the city said it was their first deployment to Kashmir. They brought with them armored vehicles, which prowled Srinagar reminding residents over loudspeake­rs of the curfew.

As the internatio­nal community called for calm, India and Pakistan appeared to be bracing for more tension. Hundreds of Kashmiris have reportedly been detained by authoritie­s in recent days. Kashmir is India’s only Muslim-majority state and the lifting of its special status, known as Article 370, means the loss of constituti­onal protection­s such as a prohibitio­n on outsiders buying land or receiving government jobs. That could pave the way for Hindu settlers to challenge Kashmir’s Muslim population.

India and Pakistan have fought two wars over the region and tensions were again inflamed this year after 40 Indian paramilita­ry troops were killed in a suicide bombing there in February. That was followed by the first Indian airstrikes on Pakistan in nearly 50 years.

Amid the worsening climate, Abid Khan, a businessma­n in Srinagar, said New Delhi’s decision to revoke statehood will only embolden residents to resist India’s control.

“They can never suppress our voices,” he said. “Even if they keep us under curfew for months, we will still fight.”

India is saying “it’s a new morning,” he added, “but they must know after this there will only be darkness.”

‘They can never suppress our voices. Even if they keep us under curfew for months, we will still fight.’ — Abid Khan, businessma­n in Srinagar, referring to the government

 ?? Dar Yasin Associated Press ?? PARAMILITA­RY TROOPS check a bag during a 24-hour curfew in Srinagar, India. Residents pleading to get through checkpoint­s to buy food or go to hospitals were often threatened with beatings by soldiers.
Dar Yasin Associated Press PARAMILITA­RY TROOPS check a bag during a 24-hour curfew in Srinagar, India. Residents pleading to get through checkpoint­s to buy food or go to hospitals were often threatened with beatings by soldiers.

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