The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Suspected militant killed in Indian Kashmir

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NEW DELHI: A militant in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir affiliated to a Pakistani-based militant group was killed by security forces in the restive territory yesterday, police said.

Asif Maqbool Bhatt belonged to Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), a Pakistan-based group designated by the UN as a terrorist organisati­on, senior local police official Munir Khan told AFP.

“He hurled a grenade at the police team in Sopore region on Wednesday morning. He was killed in retaliatio­n,” Khan told AFP.

Tensions have heightened in Kashmir since New Delhi stripped its part of the Himalayan region, split between India and Pakistan since 1947 and the source of several conflicts, of its autonomy of August 5.

India also sent thousands of extra troops to reinforce the 500,000 already there, detained almost all the region’s politician­s, severely restricted movement and cut landlines, mobile phones and the Internet. Some restrictio­ns have since been eased.

UN rights chief Michelle Bachelet said on Monday she was ‘deeply concerned about the impact of recent actions by the government of India on the human rights of Kashmiris’.

India’s national security adviser said Saturday that a ‘majority’ of Kashmiris supported its move except for a ‘vocal minority’ backed by Pakistan, which he said has readied 230 militants to infiltrate Kashmir.

Bhatt is believed to have been involved in the recent attack of family members of a local apple trader — a mainstay of the local economy — who India says have been put under pressure by militants not to send their fruit elsewhere in India.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have been killed since an uprising -- blamed by New Delhi on Islamabad — against Indian rule erupted in 1989.

LeT claimed responsibi­lity for a suicide bombing in Kashmir in February that killed 40 Indian troops, and has been accused by India and the United States of carrying out attacks in Mumbai in 2008 that killed 160 people.

Last week, senior Indian army officer Lieutenant General Kanwal Jeet Singh Dhillon said two Pakistani ‘terrorists’ had been arrested in Kashmir.

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 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? An Indian security personnel stands guard on a deserted road during restrictio­ns after scrapping of the special constituti­onal status for Kashmir by the Indian government in Srinagar.
— Reuters file photo An Indian security personnel stands guard on a deserted road during restrictio­ns after scrapping of the special constituti­onal status for Kashmir by the Indian government in Srinagar.

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