The Guardian (USA)

Heightened security and anxiety in Kashmir amid fears of unrest

- Azhar Farooq in Kashmir and Rebecca Ratcliffe in Delhi

People across the Indian-administer­ed side of Kashmir queued for hours outside petrol stations and cash machines on Sunday following a heightenin­g of security measures that has prompted fears of unrest.Thousands of tourists and Hindu pilgrims have been evacuated since Friday, after the Indian government cancelled the annual Amarnath Yatra, a 45-day pilgrimage to a Himalayan cave shrine. Officials said they had received intelligen­ce suggesting an attack on pilgrimage routes, which 300,000 people have set out on since July.Kashmir residents were told not to panic, though curfews and evacuation­s continued to be imposed on hospitals and educationa­l institutio­ns over the weekend. On Sunday evening mobile internet was cut across Kashmir valley.Kashmir is claimed by India and Pakistan in full and ruled in part by both. An insurgency on the Indian-administer­ed side

has been ongoing for three decades, and tens of thousands of people have been killed.

The deployment of 10,000 extra troops last week prompted speculatio­n that Delhi is preparing to remove Kashmir’s special status, which prevents people from outside of the state from buying land in the Muslim-majority territory. The ruling Bharatiya Janata party (BJP) has repeatedly pledged to scrap such rules, but doing so would almost certainly trigger unrest and escalate tensions with Pakistan.

One of Kashmir’s most prominent politician­s, Omar Abdullah, the former chief minister, said he had been informed he would be placed under house arrest from midnight. Other “mainstream leaders” - meaning Kashmiri politician­s who have formed alliances with parties such as the BJP would be detained, he added.

“I believe I’m being placed under house arrest from midnight tonight & the process has already started for other mainstream leaders. No way of knowing if this is true but if it is then I’ll see all of you on the other side of whatever is in store. Allah save us,” he said on Twitter.

It was unclear why Abdullah and others would be targetted by Indian authoritie­s for detention.

In Srinagar, the largest city in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir, preparatio­ns for Eid, which is one week away, have been abandoned by many. “They want us to die of this anxiety,” said one man waiting at a petrol station on Saturday night. On Sunday, queues still lasted for hours, with many pumps run dry.

Naseer Ahmed, a boatman at Srinagar’s Dal lake who has been taking holidaymak­ers on rides for 40 years, said he had never witnessed such an alarming situation. “On one day we had so many tourists and on another everything has fallen silent,” he said.

The few remaining tourists are waiting for their turns to leave. “No one knows what will happen tomorrow,” said Ahmed.

Analysts say there is still no clear informatio­n about what has prompted the security buildup, which officials have blamed on security threats. “[Terror threats] have been there for 30 years. I don’t understand what the scope and nature of this threat is that’s so extraordin­ary,” said Khalid Shah, an associate fellow at the Observer Research Foundation.

As Kashmir waits nervously, many fear that wedding season, as well as Eid celebratio­ns, could be forgotten. Faizan Ahmad’s family have been preparing for months for his marriage, due to take place on 24 August. “The entire family is in a dilemma,” he said. “There is a mental trauma [about] what to do.”

On Saturday, non-Kashmiri students at the National Institute of Technology in Srinagar were sent home, while on Sunday a curfew was issued for all staff at the city’s Chest Diseases hospital. All district officers were ordered by the deputy commission­er of the Kargil district not to leave their duty stations.

Authoritie­s could impose an indefinite curfew on residents as early as Sunday night, a police official told Agence France-Presse.

Skirmishes continued on Sunday along the line of control that divides Kashmir. The Indian army said it had foiled an attempt by a Pakistani team of army regulars and militants to cross the line, killing “five to seven” attackers.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s prime minister, Imran Khan, accused India of attacking civilians across the line of control and of using cluster munitions, a violation of internatio­nal law. In a statement reported by the Indian Express newspaper, the Indian army firmly denied the allegation.

Khan said the situation “has the potential to blow up into a regional crisis”, and called again for US president Donald Trump to mediate. Delhi has always refused third-party mediation and recently rejected Trump’s claim that he had been asked by prime minister Narendra Modi to broker a deal.

Pakistan’s position on Kashmir has been strengthen­ed by the US’s eagerness to withdraw from Afghanista­n, said Shah. “Pakistan will use Kashmir as a bargaining chip,” he added, as the US pushes for cooperatio­n on a peace deal.

Analysts believe this may prompt Delhi to push back and demonstrat­e its regional clout. “It [the BJP] is perfectly comfortabl­e using an iron fist in Kashmir, and has demonstrat­ed little interest in conciliati­on – other than repeatedly calling for more ‘developmen­t’ in Kashmir. This is a tone-deaf call, given that for most Kashmiris, it’s not poverty, but the brutal acts of Indian security forces that trouble them the most,” said Michael Kugelman, deputy director of the Asia programme and senior associate for South Asia at the Wilson Center.

 ??  ?? An Indian paramilita­ry trooper stops a car for questionin­g in Srinagar on Sunday. Photograph: Tauseef Mustafa/AFP/Getty
An Indian paramilita­ry trooper stops a car for questionin­g in Srinagar on Sunday. Photograph: Tauseef Mustafa/AFP/Getty
 ??  ?? Non-Kashmiri students from Srinagar’s National Institute board a train home in Jammu on Saturday. Photograph: STR/AFP/ Getty Images
Non-Kashmiri students from Srinagar’s National Institute board a train home in Jammu on Saturday. Photograph: STR/AFP/ Getty Images

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