New Straits Times

‘KASHMIR’S GAZA’ FIGHTS BACK

Soura residents defying India’s clampdown on Kashmir seals off neighbourh­ood

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YOUNG men sit beside a pile of rocks and a bonfire, protecting the only entrance to a besieged neighbourh­ood they call “Kashmir’s Gaza” as a mosque loudspeake­r broadcasts slogans of liberation.

In an act of defiance against New Delhi’s controvers­ial decision to strip the Muslim-majority region of its autonomy, Soura neighbourh­ood on the outskirts of Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar has sealed itself off from security forces.

Since early this month, residents have erected ramshackle barricades of tin sheets, wooden logs, oil tanks and concrete pillars, and dug trenches to keep soldiers at bay amid daily protests against India.

“They can only enter Soura over our bodies. We won’t give even an inch of land to India,” Mufeed, a resident who volunteers to guard the neighbourh­ood at night, said.

“Just like Gaza is resisting Israel, we will fight for our motherland with all our might.”

Kashmir has waged a threedecad­e long armed rebellion against Indian rule with tens of

thousands of lives, mostly civilians, lost in the conflict.

Ahead of the announceme­nt, India rushed tens of thousands of extra troops to the restive region to join 500,000 already in the valley, and imposed a strict clampdown fearing further unrest.

But protests have broken out, with the lower-middle class Soura leading the way. At least 15,000 people rallied on Aug 9, the biggest demonstrat­ion in Kashmir so far.

They were met by security forces firing live ammunition, tear gas and pellet guns to disperse the crowds, with more than two dozen people reportedly injured.

Soura, a crammed lakeside community of more than 2,000 homes, is surrounded by security forces on three sides.

The renowned mosque Jenab Saeb has become an assembly point for thousands of protesters in the neighbourh­ood.

Every night, residents march through its narrow lanes, carrying torches and passing graffiti with the words “Freedom for Kashmir” and “Go India, go back”.

Locals pass along messages if they spot any police movement on the main highway just beyond Soura.

Police forces, who have deployed drones and helicopter­s, tried to enter Soura at least three times but were pushed back by stone-throwing youth, some also armed with axes and harpoons.

Familiar with police’s crowddispe­rsing tactics, protesters use saltwater to wash their faces after chilli and tear gas are fired, and wear helmets and glasses to protect themselves against pellets.

“They (India) are testing our resilience and they will definitely fail,” local Nahida said.

“We defeated them last time and even if this situation continues for years, we won’t givein.”

 ??  ?? A man walking at a back street with a hole dug in the ground to restrict movements in the Soura locality in Srinagar recently. AFP PIC
A man walking at a back street with a hole dug in the ground to restrict movements in the Soura locality in Srinagar recently. AFP PIC

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