A.Rafay
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SRINAGAR - Residents of Indian-held Kashmir chafed for a second day Sunday under a curfew imposed following the hanging of Afzal Guru which has sparked a fresh debate on capital punishment.
Mohammed Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri Muslim was executed Saturday in New Delhis Tihar Jail.
Fearing a backlash, Indian authorities imposed an indefinite curfew on Saturday in major populated areas of Kashmir, shut down Internet services and blocked local newspapers in a bid to prevent demonstrations.
One protester died on Sunday when he jumped into the Jhelum River to escape government forces in the Sambal area and another four were injured after police fired tear gas to disperse a crowd near Gurus home town of Sopore, 43 kilometres from the biggest city of Srinagar.
Abdul Hafeez, a resident of Srinagar, said his two-month-old granddaughter needed milk, but they were unable to go shopping because of strict orders restricting people to their homes.
We have seen so much violence in the past. We just hope that things return to normal as quickly as possible, he told AFP.
The one-time fruit merchant and medical college dropout, Afzal Guru, always insisted he was innocent and was initially denied a proper legal defence. Protesters in Kashmir have often accused the police of framing him.
The worlds biggest democracy uses capital punishment for the rarest of rare crimes.
It had not carried out an execution since 2004 until the hanging in November last year of Mohammed Kasab, the lone surviving gunman of 2008 militant attacks in Mumbai.
The two executions - both approved under new President Pranab Mukherjee raised concerns among human rights activists who had hoped India was phasing out executions.
India should end this distressing use of executions as a way to satisfy some public opinion, said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch.
Amnesty International was also quick to condemn Gurus hanging as a disturbing and regressive trend towards executions in India.
A section of the Indian press speculated on who could be the next to face the gallows, while the newspaper The Hindu slammed the execution.
There is no principle underpinning the death penalty in India today except vengeance. And vengeance is no principle at all, the daily wrote.
In Kashmir, where a bloody freedom struggle has claimed an estimated 100,000 lives over the last 20 years, some feared that the execution could feed local anti-India feeling and spur more violence.
Held Kashmirs puppet chief minister Omar Abdullah said the long-term implications of Gurus hanging were worrying as they were linked to the people of the region.
Like it or not, the execution has reinforced the point that there is no justice, he told Indias NDTV network.
Gurus execution was mired in further controversy Sunday after his family said they learned about it from television reports. The government said it had sent a letter by registered mail.
We were not informed by the government... if they sent a letter, please show us the receipt, Yasin Guru, a cousin, told the same news channel.
In Muzaffarabad, Azad Kashmir, around 400 people held funeral prayers in absentia for Guru, led by Shahabuddin Madani, the leader of religious party Jamiat Ahle Hadith.
The execution of Guru has infused a new life in the Kashmiri freedom struggle and people will now fight against Indian forces everywhere, in mountains and planes of Kashmir, Madani warned.
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-n...sh-protests-in-***-over-guru-hanging-one-dead
Mohammed Afzal Guru, a Kashmiri Muslim was executed Saturday in New Delhis Tihar Jail.
Fearing a backlash, Indian authorities imposed an indefinite curfew on Saturday in major populated areas of Kashmir, shut down Internet services and blocked local newspapers in a bid to prevent demonstrations.
One protester died on Sunday when he jumped into the Jhelum River to escape government forces in the Sambal area and another four were injured after police fired tear gas to disperse a crowd near Gurus home town of Sopore, 43 kilometres from the biggest city of Srinagar.
Abdul Hafeez, a resident of Srinagar, said his two-month-old granddaughter needed milk, but they were unable to go shopping because of strict orders restricting people to their homes.
We have seen so much violence in the past. We just hope that things return to normal as quickly as possible, he told AFP.
The one-time fruit merchant and medical college dropout, Afzal Guru, always insisted he was innocent and was initially denied a proper legal defence. Protesters in Kashmir have often accused the police of framing him.
The worlds biggest democracy uses capital punishment for the rarest of rare crimes.
It had not carried out an execution since 2004 until the hanging in November last year of Mohammed Kasab, the lone surviving gunman of 2008 militant attacks in Mumbai.
The two executions - both approved under new President Pranab Mukherjee raised concerns among human rights activists who had hoped India was phasing out executions.
India should end this distressing use of executions as a way to satisfy some public opinion, said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch.
Amnesty International was also quick to condemn Gurus hanging as a disturbing and regressive trend towards executions in India.
A section of the Indian press speculated on who could be the next to face the gallows, while the newspaper The Hindu slammed the execution.
There is no principle underpinning the death penalty in India today except vengeance. And vengeance is no principle at all, the daily wrote.
In Kashmir, where a bloody freedom struggle has claimed an estimated 100,000 lives over the last 20 years, some feared that the execution could feed local anti-India feeling and spur more violence.
Held Kashmirs puppet chief minister Omar Abdullah said the long-term implications of Gurus hanging were worrying as they were linked to the people of the region.
Like it or not, the execution has reinforced the point that there is no justice, he told Indias NDTV network.
Gurus execution was mired in further controversy Sunday after his family said they learned about it from television reports. The government said it had sent a letter by registered mail.
We were not informed by the government... if they sent a letter, please show us the receipt, Yasin Guru, a cousin, told the same news channel.
In Muzaffarabad, Azad Kashmir, around 400 people held funeral prayers in absentia for Guru, led by Shahabuddin Madani, the leader of religious party Jamiat Ahle Hadith.
The execution of Guru has infused a new life in the Kashmiri freedom struggle and people will now fight against Indian forces everywhere, in mountains and planes of Kashmir, Madani warned.
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-n...sh-protests-in-***-over-guru-hanging-one-dead