Deccan Chronicle

ASSESS RIGHTS SITUATION IN INDIA, SAY U.S. SENATORS

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Washington, Feb. 13: Ahead of President Donald Trump’s maiden visit to India, four influentia­l US Senators, who described themselves as “longtime friends of India”, have sought an assessment of the human rights situation in Kashmir and religious freedom in the country, saying hundreds of Kashmiris remain in “preventive detention”.

The bipartisan group of Senators, in their letter to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo dated February 12, said that India has now imposed the longest-ever internet shutdown by a democracy, disrupting access to medical care, business and education for seven million people.

The Indian government abrogated Article 370 of the Constituti­on on August 5, 2019 that granted special status to Jammu and Kashmir, and imposed severe curbs including on movement of people as well as on mobile telephone and internet connectivi­ty. The crackdown drew internatio­nal criticism with several countries expressing concerns over the situation in Kashmir.

India has categorica­lly told the internatio­nal community that its move to scrap Article 370 was an internal matter.

Internet is being restored in the Valley in a phased manner after reviewing the security situation. The US lawmakers, describing themselves as “longtime friends of India”, wrote in the letter that “more than six months after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government unilateral­ly revoked the autonomy of J&K, the government continues to block most internet in the region”.

Signatorie­s to the letter are Chris Van Hollen, Todd Young, Richard J. Durbin and Lindsey O. Graham.

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