The Borneo Post

Indian Kashmir tense as key anniversar­y looms

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In a crowded hospital in Kashmir, a 17-year- old student is recovering from gunshot wounds, one of thousands of civilians injured in protests against Indian rule that have exploded since the death of a popular rebel leader a year ago.

When government forces came to his village in the picturesqu­e Himalayan region recently to raid a militant hideout, the teenager, who does not want to be named, threw himself into a hail of bullets to help the fighters escape.

“I leapt in between a trapped militant and soldiers who were shooting and took the bullets myself,” he told AFP from his hospital bed in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir.

Kashmir, divided between India and Pakistan since 1947, is one of the most heavily militarise­d spots on earth with a long history of conflict.

The mountainou­s region is home to dozens of armed groups fighting for independen­ce or a merger of the territory with Pakistan.

But since the charismati­c rebel leader Burhan Wani was shot dead by security forces on July 8, civilians have played an increasing­ly active role in the rebellion against Indian rule.

The death of the dashing 23year- old, who had built up a big following on social media as he posed with an AK- 47, sparked a huge outpouring of grief in Kashmir.

Nearly 100 civilians were killed in mass protests in the months that followed, most shot dead by security forces.

Many more were blinded by the pellet guns used by government forces in the region, further exacerbati­ng the divide between authoritie­s and an already alienated civilian population.

Hospital authoritie­s in Srinagar say they have seen a steady stream of injured civilians since July and treated more than 1,000 for ‘horrific’ eye injuries.

In parts of south Kashmir — the epicentre of the renewed insurgency — villagers began intervenin­g in anti-militant raids, throwing stones at government forces to create a distractio­n and give the rebels a chance to flee.

“It is a direct confrontat­ion now,” said Kashmiri historian Sidiq Wahid.

“Public anger and defiance has reached levels never seen in Kashmir before.” Kashmir’s separatist leaders — most of whom have been either confined to their homes or jailed ahead of the anniversar­y — have called for a week of protests from Saturday to mark Wani’s death.

Authoritie­s have begun controllin­g people’s movements and suspended mobile internet services in some areas.

One senior officer said police stations across south Kashmir were full of motorbikes seized to stop activists moving between villages.

India has deployed two additional army battalions — about 2,000 troops — to troubled regions in the southern Kashmir area.

But some officials say the challenge now is to deal with public anger rather than the militant threat.

“The armed militants are not much of a challenge,” one senior security official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“Counterins­urgency operations have been intensifie­d and we are eliminatin­g them. But in absence of any political forces engaging the people, they (rebels) have galvanised the public sentiment against India.” Jammu and Kashmir, India’s only Muslimmajo­rity state, has since 2014 been governed by the pro-India People’s Democratic Party in an unpopular coalition with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ruling Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

Analysts say this has intensifie­d public opposition to Indian rule in Kashmir, where nearly 100 youths joined the rebel ranks since Wani’s death.

Many have taken weapons from police and paramilita­ry forces during patrols.

Although he is still so weak he can only speak in a whisper, the wounded teen hopes he will soon be among them.

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