The Denver Post

Curfew partially eased for prayers amid lockdown

- By Ashok Sharma

NEW DELHI» A strict curfew in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir in effect for a fifth day was eased Friday to allow residents to pray at mosques, officials said, but some protests still broke out in the disputed region despite thousands of security forces in the streets as tensions remained high with neighborin­g Pakistan.

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

Thousands of Indian troops were deployed to the area, with more than 500 people arrested.

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.

Dilbagh Singh, the region’s police chief, told The Associated Press that residents in its largest city of Srinagar were being allowed to pray at area-specific mosques.

The relaxing of the curfew in Srinagar was temporary, officials said. Friday prayers began at 12:37 p.m. in Srinagar and lasted for about 20 minutes. Television images from the city showed small groups praying in mosques.

“We see a sense of calm and normalcy. There has been no incident of violence,” External Affairs Ministry spokesman Raveesh Kumar told reporters in New Delhi.

In Srinagar’s Mochu neighborho­od, a group of people trying to start an anti-government protest march threw stones at security forces who tried to stop them, and the paramilita­ry troops responded by firing tear gas and pellets to disperse the crowd, an AP photograph­er said. Two people suffered injuries that were not serious, the photograph­er said.

Other stone-throwing incidents were reported in Sopore in northern Kashmir, about 40 miles from Srinagar, but the situation was brought under control immediatel­y by security forces, the Press Trust of India news agency squoted unidentifi­ed officials as saying.

While people were allowed to offer prayers in their local mosques, PTI reported that there would be no Friday congregati­on at Srinagar’s historic Jama Masjid, where thousands of Muslims pray every week. It also has been a center of regular anti-India protests after Friday prayers.

Authoritie­s closely watched for any anti-India protests, which are expected to determine a further easing of restrictio­ns for the Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha, which will be celebrated Monday.

In an address to the nation Thursday night, Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised Kashmiri people that his government is making “sincere efforts to ensure that the people in the region have no difficulti­es in celebratin­g Eid.”

The restrictio­ns on public movement throughout Kashmir have forced people to stay indoors and closed shops and even clinics. Modi said the situation in the region would return to normal gradually.

The move by India to change the status of Kashmir from statehood to a territory limits its autonomy and decision-making power and eliminates its right to its own constituti­on.

In New Delhi, several Muslims who prayed at the city’s Jama Masjid mosque expressed their unhappines­s with the Indian government’s actions in Kashmir.

Aftab Uddin, a 49-year-old businessma­n, decried that the change has been brought about by force.

“If they had won their (the Kashmiris’) hearts, then we would have stood with the government,” he said. “This was a 70-year-old contract that the government squashed unconstitu­tionally. The government thinks that the situation will improve? Situation will not improve.”

Mohammed Ashfaq, a 30-year-old tailor, said the government has imposed a dictatorsh­ip, since it didn’t discuss the issue with the Kashmiri people.

However, Mohammed Salim Ansari, a parking attendant, said the change was a good move because the Kashmiri people live in India but support Pakistan.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States