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Tensions ramp up after India pulls Kashmir’s special status

- By Emily Schmall

NEW DELHI — Indian lawmakers passed a bill Tuesday that strips the statehood from the Indianadmi­nistered portion of Muslim-majority Kashmir amid an indefinite security lockdown in the disputed Himalayan territory, actions that neighborin­g Pakistan warned could lead to war.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t-led government submitted the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganiza­tion Bill for a vote by the lower house of Parliament a day after the surprise measure was introduced alongside a presidenti­al order.

That order dissolved a constituti­onal provision, known as Article 370, that gave Kashmiris exclusive hereditary rights and a separate constituti­on.

“After five years, seeing developmen­t in J&K (Jammu and Kashmir) under the leadership of PM Modi, people of the valley will understand drawbacks of Article 370,” Indian Home Minister Amit Shah said just before the bill was passed.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan and both claim the region in its entirety, although each of them controls only parts of it. Two of the three wars the nuclear-armed neighbors have fought since their independen­ce from British rule were over Kashmir.

How the 7 million people in the Kashmir Valley were reacting was unclear, because the Indian government shut off most communicat­ion with it, including internet, cellphone and landline networks.

Thousands of troops were deployed to the restive region amid fears that the government’s steps could spark unrest in Kashmir.

Tensions also have soared along the Line of Control, the militarize­d frontier that divides Kashmir between India and Pakistan.

Hundreds of people in various parts of Pakistan and in its part of Kashmir rallied against Modi, burning him in effigy and torching Indian flags to condemn India’s moves.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan said in an address Tuesday night to Parliament that he feared the Kashmiri people, angered over India’s decision to strip the region of its special status, could attack Indian security forces and that New Delhi could blame Pakistan for it.

“If India attacks us, we will respond,” Khan said. “We will fight until the last drop of blood.”

In February, a bombing in Indian-controlled Kashmir killed 40 Indian troops. India responded with an airstrike inside Pakistan, blaming a Pakistani group for the attack.

On Tuesday, the Pakistani military was on alert after reports that New Delhi was continuing to send additional troops to the region.

Pakistan’s top military commanders met in the garrison city of Rawalpindi to discuss the changes in Kashmir.

China, which also lays claim to a portion of Kashmir, is “seriously concerned” about the situation, foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said.

“China’s position on the Kashmir issue is clear and consistent. It is also an internatio­nal consensus that the Kashmir issue is an issue left from the past between India and Pakistan. The relevant sides need to exercise restraint and act prudently. In particular, they should refrain from taking actions that will unilateral­ly change the status quo and escalate tensions,” she said.

India’s lower house ratified the bill, which strips the status of Jammu and Kashmir from a state to a union territory with a legislatur­e, and carves out Buddhist-majority Ladakh, a pristine and sparsely populated area that stretches from the Siachen Glacier to the Himalayas, as a separate union territory without a legislatur­e.

The upper house approved the bill by a twothirds majority.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged all parties to show restraint, said spokesman Stephane Dujarric.

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ARIF ALI/GETTY-AFP

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