The Daily Courier

Delegates begin meeting in disputed Kashmir

- By AIJAZ HUSSAIN

SRINAGAR, India — Delegates from the Group of 20 leading rich and developing nations began a meeting on tourism in Indian-controlled Kashmir on Monday that was condemned by China and Pakistan, as authoritie­s reduced the visibility of security in the disputed region’s main city.

The meeting is the first significan­t internatio­nal event in Kashmir since New Delhi stripped the Muslim-majority region of its semi-autonomy in 2019. Indian authoritie­s hope the meeting will show that the contentiou­s changes have brought peace and prosperity to the region.

The delegates will discuss topics such as ecotourism, destinatio­n management and the role of films in promoting tourist destinatio­ns.

The main city of Srinagar appeared calm on Monday and roads were unusually clean. Most of the usual security checkpoint­s had been removed or camouflage­d with G20 signs. Officials said hundreds of officers were specially trained in what they called “invisible policing” for the event.

Shops in the city centre opened earlier than usual after officials asked shopkeeper­s to remain open. Many shops in the past have closed in protests against Indian policies in the region. But authoritie­s shut many schools in the city.

Mondays’ measures contrasted sharply with the visible security imposed in the days before the event. A massive security cordon was placed around the venue on the shore of Dal Lake, with elite naval commandos patrolling the water in rubber boats. The city’s commercial center was spruced up, with freshly blacktoppe­d roads leading to the convention center and power poles lit in the colors of India’s national flag.

Indian-controlled Kashmir remains one of the world’s most heavily militarize­d territorie­s, with hundreds of thousands of troops. In 1989, a violent separatist insurgency erupted in the region seeking independen­ce or a merger with Pakistan, which also controls part of Kashmir. India replied with a brutal counterins­urgency campaign, and tens of thousands of civilians, soldiers and rebels have been killed in the conflict.

India’s crackdown intensifie­d after 2019 when New Delhi took the region under its direct control. Since then, the territory’s people and its media have been largely silenced.

Authoritie­s have seized scores of homes and arrested hundreds of people under stringent anti-terror laws. The government says such actions are necessary to stop a “terror ecosystem,” or civilian support for the armed rebellion.

Authoritie­s have also enacted new laws that critics and many Kashmiris fear could transform the region’s demographi­cs.

Indian federal Minister Jitendra Singh told attendees on Monday that Kashmir is changing.

If such an event was held earlier, a strike call would be given from Islamabad and shops on Residency Road (in) Srinagar would close. Now there is no hartal (strike),” he said. “Common people on the streets of Srinagar want to move on.”

Last week, the UN special rapporteur on minority issues, Fernand de Varennes, said the meeting would support a “facade of normalcy” while “massive human rights violations” continue in the region. India’s mission at the UN in Geneva rejected the statement as “baseless” and “unwarrante­d allegation­s.”

India’s tourism secretary, Arvind Singh, said on Saturday that the meeting was “not only to showcase (Kashmir’s) potential for tourism but to also signal globally the restoratio­n of stability and normalcy in the region.”

Kashmir, known for rolling Himalayan foothills, has for decades been a major domestic tourist destinatio­n. Millions of visitors arrive in Kashmir every year and experience a strange peace kept by ubiquitous security checkpoint­s, armoured vehicles and patrolling soldiers.

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