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Ban on high-speed internet not proving enough to prevent rising violence in Kashmir

Officials involved with counter-insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir are concerned about rising violence in the Union territory.
Azaan Javaid 4 May, 2020 2:54 pm IST


securityforce-696x392.jpg

A file photo of Indian security forces in Jammu and Kashmir. Photo: Praveen Jain/ThePrint


Srinagar: The Jammu and Kashmir government has justified the ban on high-speed internet in the Union territory citing the low number of terror related incidents. But the security establishment in the Union territory is anticipating a “hot summer” as the ban won’t be able to effectively contain the numbers.

Speaking to ThePrint on condition of anonymity, several officials involved with counter-insurgency expressed concern over the rising violence in the region over the last few weeks. They said the ban on high-speed internet won’t change Pakistan-backed militant strategy for this year.

This comes even as five security force personnel, including two Army officers, were killed in an encounter in Handwara Saturday.


The officials also expect the insurgency to increase in the north Kashmir region for the first time since the encounter of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani in 2016. The northern region had seen relatively lower insurgent activities in the past decade as compared to south Kashmir.

The comments come after the J&K government Wednesday responded to a petition filed in the Supreme Court to seek restoration of 4G internet service in J&K. In its response, the government said “108 terrorist related incidents” took place between August 2019 and April.

In the comparative period between August 2018 and April 2019, there were more than 450 such incidents. The numbers stood at around 300, 200 and 160 in the same period for the three years prior to that, the officials told ThePrint.


Terrorism related violence includes encounters, terror attacks, civilian killings, grenade attacks, abductions and so on, according to police.

The number of incidents fell after August 2019 when the J&K administration enforced a communications blackout and a clampdown on movement. It was followed by months of shutdown by Kashmir residents who were opposing the Modi government’s decision to scrap the erstwhile state’s special status (Article 370).


Why the number of incidents fell
According to senior police officers in Jammu and Kashmir, a change in terror strategy and the lockdown enforced ahead of scrapping of Article 370 were major factors behind the reduced levels of violence last year.

They pointed out that recruitment of local militants and infiltration of foreign terrorists didn’t see any fall during the lockdown.

“The militants used the post-August quiet to regroup and recruit. However, they have not been able to, or decided not to carry out any major attack in the Valley or beyond,” said a senior police officer, before adding a caveat.

“Although the decrease in violence coincided with the communication blackout and the subsequent increase in violence, what we are witnessing now is happening when all communication channels, barring high speed internet, are functional. It doesn’t mean that reducing internet speeds will change the 2020 militant strategy backed by Pakistan,” said the officer who didn’t wish to be named.

ThePrint had reported last month how security officials saw emergence of new militant outfits in Kashmir as the start of a “violent campaign”, which existing terror groups such as the Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad couldn’t undertake amid growing international scrutiny over them.


In the apex court, the J&K administration said that of the 108 incidents in these eight months, 99 were reported from Kashmir and 9 from Jammu.

It added, “30 civilians lost their lives, while 114 civilians were injured in terrorist related incidents. 20 security forces personnel were martyred and 54 SF personnel were injured. 76 terrorists were killed apart from the arrest of 132 terrorists/ suspects.”

However, since 25 March, when a nationwide lockdown was imposed, 57 persons have been killed in Kashmir, including 31 militants, seven civilians, six CRPF men and two J&K police personnel.

The deaths also included five Army personnel killed in a close combat in the first week of April in Keran sector in north Kashmir’s Kupwara. Among the six slain CRPF men were three who were killed by a lone terrorist in an attack in Sopore, believed to be from the newly floated militant outfit, The Resistance Front.

“We suspect that militant groups will continue to escalate violence in the coming months,” said a counter insurgency official posted in south Kashmir.

“There are few concern areas, one being that despite infiltration reported last year, there haven’t been many encounters in which foreigners have been killed. This means that the FT’s (foreign terrorists) are not moving, which in turn could mean more recruitment of local boys and of impending attacks,” said the official on condition of anonymity.

Pellet injuries

The security establishment is also concerned about resurgence in stone pelting incidents at encounter sites, mostly aimed at either protesting the presence of security forces or helping the militants flee by sabotaging the encounter.

According to two senior police officers, after several months, April recorded the first pellet injuries during a protest near an encounter.

“Seven to eight people received pellet injuries in an encounter in Shopian’s Melhora area last week. Another woman received a bullet injury during one such encounter in south Kashmir last month,” said a third police officer who didn’t wish to be named.

“Because most of the encounters in the past eight months were brief, scope of subsequent violent protests was less but in some encounters now, we have been witnessing stone pelting incidents,” said the officer.

“One reason for the stone pelting could be the authorities decision to bury unidentified local militants in graveyards other than those in their native villages,” said the counter insurgency official quoted above.

Last month, J&K police buried people they said were unidentified terrorists killed in encounters at a graveyard designated to bury foreign terrorists. Kashmiri families later turned up to claim the bodies, causing tensions in several parts of south Kashmir, particularly Shopian.

‘Hot summer’
The third police officer said the security establishment was now bracing for a “hot summer”, a speculation amplified by reports of “missing youth”.

“We have been getting reports of several youth missing in Pulwama, Shopian and Kulgam. We are ascertaining whether they have joined militant ranks or not,” said the officer, adding that it seemed terror groups would likely escalate violence in parts of northern Kashmir this year.

The insurgency in north Kashmir had remained a low-scale affair after the encounter of Burhan Wani. This might change.

“In Sopore we have reports of 10-12 militants getting active past month. They include Pakistani nationals,” the officer added.

https://theprint.in/india/ban-on-hi...to-prevent-rising-violence-in-kashmir/413916/
 
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I wonder why in the struggle in Kashmir, people don't use firebombing and Molotov cocktail? Surely, it would better than throwing stones at armoured vehicles...
 
.
EXa67mLXgAERmj1


Childhood in #Kashmir. Having your home razed to the ground, looking for your notebook. Photo:
@FirdousQadriph1


India uses coronavirus pandemic to exploit human rights in Kashmir
The United Nations has called for an immediate global ceasefire to “put armed conflict in lockdown” and focus on protecting the most vulnerable from the spread of COVID-19. Yet tragically, there are cases around the world where violations have occurred.

Ongoing developments in Kashmir include a crackdown on Kashmiri journalists, rising policing powers and enhanced curfew measures. These actions suggest that the Indian government may be exploiting the pandemic to accelerate its settler-colonial ambitions in the disputed territory.

file-20200504-83721-oz21zx.jpg

Indian paramilitary soldiers guard at a closed market in Srinagar, Indian-occupied Kashmir, Aug. 21, 2019. (AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)
For the past six years, I have worked as a researcher along the Line of Control (LoC) — the de-facto border that divides Kashmir into India and Pakistan. I am also on the board of directors for the advocacy organization, Canadians for Peace and Justice in Kashmir.

Thousands of Kashmiris live within a 10-kilometre radius of the LoC, which is so heavily militarized that it is visible from space.

Kashmiris are vulnerable to both the contagion and the violence of the ongoing conflict.

War during a pandemic
In April, the Indian army set up artillery weapons deep in Kashmiri villages, as far as 60 kilometres from bunkered areas, to launch long-distance fire on Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.

This encroachment is creating widespread panic and anxiety. Locals are protesting the shifting of heavy artillery guns into their communities, fearing retaliatory fire from the Pakistani army.

It is an intentional strategy to station soldiers and artillery among communities to make it difficult for the Pakistani army to retaliate. The blurring of civilian and military targets amounts to a war crime.

The Indian army has used civilian populations as a human shield before. In 2017, footage emerged of a Kashmiri man tied to a military vehicle patrolling a Kashmiri town.

As Indian and Pakistani forces continue to exchange fire, widespread loss of civilian life and property is being reported on both sides of the LoC.

file-20200430-42913-1s82hyp.JPG

An underground community bunker in Neelum valley, Pakistan-controlled Kashmir. (Nusrat Jamal), Author provided
During the exchange of cross-border fire, families are forced to take shelter in community bunkers. These are small enclosed spaces that make social distancing practices impossible to follow.

Furthermore, people trying to escape their villages during bombardment are prevented from leaving by the police as they enforce COVID-19 lockdown measures.

Asia’s Berlin Wall
The LoC, also known as Asia’s Berlin Wall, does not constitute a legally recognized international boundary. It was put in place in 1949 as a temporary measure until the status of Kashmir is resolved.

In her book Body of Victim, Body of Warrior, Cabeiri deBergh Robinson, associate professor of South Asian studies at the University of Washington, explains that in earlier years, the LoC was permeable and fluid. It was only after the Simla Agreement in 1972, that it came to mimic the impermeability of a border.

file-20200504-83757-mgapy6.jpg

In this Oct. 4, 2016 photo, Indian army soldiers patrol near the highly militarized Line of Control dividing Kashmir between India and Pakistan, in Pallanwal, Indian-occupied Kashmir. (AP Photo/Channi Anand) (AP Photo/Channi Anand)
‘100 little sleeps’
From 1990-2003, during the peak of the Kashmiri insurgency, the LoC was a site of intense conflict between Indian and Pakistani militaries.

Armies fired long-range artillery and mortar shells at each other, killing and harming civilians, property and livestock in the process.

Even though a shaky ceasefire was reached in 2003, skirmishes flare up unannounced.

During my research in the Neelum valley in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, a villager described living near the LoC: “We are never at ease. The firing can start at any time. It’s like having 100 little sleeps every night.”

The number of civilians killed on each side of the LoC is challenging to document, given a lack of government transparency.

The United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) is responsible for monitoring the ceasefire. India stands accused of blocking UNMOGIP’s access to the LoC.

This year alone, India has committed 882 ceasefire violations.

Pre-existing inequality
Pandemics do not occur in a vacuum but exacerbate pre-existing inequalities.

Kashmir is ill-prepared to handle the pandemic. In Indian-occupied Kashmir, there is one soldier for every nine people but only one ventilator for every 71,000 people, and one doctor for every 3,900 people.

Health facilities along the LoC are severely deficient, reflecting India and Pakistan’s neglect of the sub-region.

Given the current suspension of high-speed 4G internet, Kashmiris are prevented from accessing necessary public health information needed to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Internet and telecommunication services are restricted on both sides of the LoC.

Kashmir’s annexation
Amid the pandemic, on Mar. 31, India introduced a new domicile law. This is one of the many legislative changes set by India following the unilateral abrogation of Article 370 in August last year.

The domicile law paves the way for demographic flooding in Kashmir, which will allow non-Kashmiris to obtain property, compete for government jobs and impact the outcomes of a referendum on Kashmir’s future should it be held.

Demographic flooding as a colonial strategy has been used by Israel along the West Bank as well as China in the Xinjiang autonomous region.

A Kashmir yet to come
The pandemic has inspired thinking on the complete restructuring of our world. It has shed light on the centrality of care workers and those at the forefront of our food systems.

file-20200504-83751-13af0k1.jpg

Kashmiri men ride a shikara, a traditional gondola, to catch fish in the interiors of the Dal Lake in Srinagar, Indian-occupied Kashmir, April 25, 2020. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
It is forcing us to imagine “a world we do not yet know and cannot describe” as scholar Vafa Ghazavi recently wrote.

A just world won’t emerge as if by magic. We will need to fight for it.

The LoC does not signal the closure of Kashmir’s forms and futures. It is a site of potentiality, for a Kashmir yet to come.

This Kashmir would not be held back by the paucity of our imagination or the lack of available language. It would be a Kashmir where Kashmiris can freely choose learning, laughter and living.

https://theconversation.com/india-u...mic-to-exploit-human-rights-in-kashmir-137682
 
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India, Pakistan Engage in Mortar Shelling, Firefight at Border

© AFP 2020 / AAMIR QURESHI
WORLD
11:27 GMT 25.06.2020Get short URL
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New Delhi (Sputnik): India and Pakistan, at odds over Jammu and Kashmir since independence, have been accusing each other of constant ceasefire violations across the Line of Control (LoC). While India claimed that Pakistan has violated the ceasefire over 2,000 times in 2020, Islamabad accused New Delhi of breaking the pact over 957 times.

Pakistan resorted to firing mortars and other weapons after it initiated an unprovoked ceasefire violation in Jammu and Kashmir's border in the Machhal Sector, India's Army claimed today, confirming that India is retaliating against the fire as well.

"Pakistan violates ceasefire in Machhal Sector, Kupwara (J&K). On 25 Jun 2020, in the afternoon hours, Pakistan initiated an unprovoked ceasefire violation (CFV) along the LoC in Machhal Sector by firing Mortars and other weapons. Befitting response is being given", stated the Indian Army's Chinar Corps infantry field formation.
Earlier, on 22 June, an Indian soldier was killed following a number of ceasefire violations by Pakistan which hit several sectors along the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir.

At least four civilians and a soldier in India have been killed in different incidents of ceasefire violations this week in the Jammu and Kashmir region. Pakistan also claimed that four civilians were killed in Indian fire on 18 June, while a 13-year-old girl was killed on 21 June.

Over the last few weeks, India and Pakistan have been involved in several ceasefire violations in which soldiers and civilians from both countries have been killed, while a lot of property has been damaged.

The diplomatic ties between New Delhi and Islamabad have deteriorated since August 2019, when India stripped Jammu and Kashmir, to which Pakistan also lays claim, of its special status. Earlier this week, the two countries decided to cut the diplomatic staff by half in their high commissions in New Delhi and Islamabad.

https://sputniknews.com/world/20200...ngage-in-mortar-shelling-firefight-at-border/
 
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Army JCO Killed in Firing Along LoC in Jammu & Kashmir’s Rajouri District

A Junior Commissioned Officer (JCO) of the Army was killed on Sunday in a firing incident along the Line of Control (LoC) in Rajouri district of Jammu and Kashmir, defence sources said. The firing from across the border started soon after the Army noticed some suspicious movement along the LoC in Nowshera sector, the sources said. They said the Indian troops retaliated strongly and in the exchange of firing, a JCO was hit by a bullet and later succumbed to injuries. The cross-border firing was going on when the last reports came in, the sources said, adding further details are awaited.
 
.
EXa67mLXgAERmj1


Childhood in #Kashmir. Having your home razed to the ground, looking for your notebook. Photo:
@FirdousQadriph1


India uses coronavirus pandemic to exploit human rights in Kashmir
The United Nations has called for an immediate global ceasefire to “put armed conflict in lockdown” and focus on protecting the most vulnerable from the spread of COVID-19. Yet tragically, there are cases around the world where violations have occurred.

Ongoing developments in Kashmir include a crackdown on Kashmiri journalists, rising policing powers and enhanced curfew measures. These actions suggest that the Indian government may be exploiting the pandemic to accelerate its settler-colonial ambitions in the disputed territory.

file-20200504-83721-oz21zx.jpg

Indian paramilitary soldiers guard at a closed market in Srinagar, Indian-occupied Kashmir, Aug. 21, 2019. (AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan)
For the past six years, I have worked as a researcher along the Line of Control (LoC) — the de-facto border that divides Kashmir into India and Pakistan. I am also on the board of directors for the advocacy organization, Canadians for Peace and Justice in Kashmir.

Thousands of Kashmiris live within a 10-kilometre radius of the LoC, which is so heavily militarized that it is visible from space.

Kashmiris are vulnerable to both the contagion and the violence of the ongoing conflict.

War during a pandemic
In April, the Indian army set up artillery weapons deep in Kashmiri villages, as far as 60 kilometres from bunkered areas, to launch long-distance fire on Pakistan-controlled Kashmir.

This encroachment is creating widespread panic and anxiety. Locals are protesting the shifting of heavy artillery guns into their communities, fearing retaliatory fire from the Pakistani army.

It is an intentional strategy to station soldiers and artillery among communities to make it difficult for the Pakistani army to retaliate. The blurring of civilian and military targets amounts to a war crime.

The Indian army has used civilian populations as a human shield before. In 2017, footage emerged of a Kashmiri man tied to a military vehicle patrolling a Kashmiri town.

As Indian and Pakistani forces continue to exchange fire, widespread loss of civilian life and property is being reported on both sides of the LoC.

file-20200430-42913-1s82hyp.JPG

An underground community bunker in Neelum valley, Pakistan-controlled Kashmir. (Nusrat Jamal), Author provided
During the exchange of cross-border fire, families are forced to take shelter in community bunkers. These are small enclosed spaces that make social distancing practices impossible to follow.

Furthermore, people trying to escape their villages during bombardment are prevented from leaving by the police as they enforce COVID-19 lockdown measures.

Asia’s Berlin Wall
The LoC, also known as Asia’s Berlin Wall, does not constitute a legally recognized international boundary. It was put in place in 1949 as a temporary measure until the status of Kashmir is resolved.

In her book Body of Victim, Body of Warrior, Cabeiri deBergh Robinson, associate professor of South Asian studies at the University of Washington, explains that in earlier years, the LoC was permeable and fluid. It was only after the Simla Agreement in 1972, that it came to mimic the impermeability of a border.

file-20200504-83757-mgapy6.jpg

In this Oct. 4, 2016 photo, Indian army soldiers patrol near the highly militarized Line of Control dividing Kashmir between India and Pakistan, in Pallanwal, Indian-occupied Kashmir. (AP Photo/Channi Anand) (AP Photo/Channi Anand)
‘100 little sleeps’
From 1990-2003, during the peak of the Kashmiri insurgency, the LoC was a site of intense conflict between Indian and Pakistani militaries.

Armies fired long-range artillery and mortar shells at each other, killing and harming civilians, property and livestock in the process.

Even though a shaky ceasefire was reached in 2003, skirmishes flare up unannounced.

During my research in the Neelum valley in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, a villager described living near the LoC: “We are never at ease. The firing can start at any time. It’s like having 100 little sleeps every night.”

The number of civilians killed on each side of the LoC is challenging to document, given a lack of government transparency.

The United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) is responsible for monitoring the ceasefire. India stands accused of blocking UNMOGIP’s access to the LoC.

This year alone, India has committed 882 ceasefire violations.

Pre-existing inequality
Pandemics do not occur in a vacuum but exacerbate pre-existing inequalities.

Kashmir is ill-prepared to handle the pandemic. In Indian-occupied Kashmir, there is one soldier for every nine people but only one ventilator for every 71,000 people, and one doctor for every 3,900 people.

Health facilities along the LoC are severely deficient, reflecting India and Pakistan’s neglect of the sub-region.

Given the current suspension of high-speed 4G internet, Kashmiris are prevented from accessing necessary public health information needed to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Internet and telecommunication services are restricted on both sides of the LoC.

Kashmir’s annexation
Amid the pandemic, on Mar. 31, India introduced a new domicile law. This is one of the many legislative changes set by India following the unilateral abrogation of Article 370 in August last year.

The domicile law paves the way for demographic flooding in Kashmir, which will allow non-Kashmiris to obtain property, compete for government jobs and impact the outcomes of a referendum on Kashmir’s future should it be held.

Demographic flooding as a colonial strategy has been used by Israel along the West Bank as well as China in the Xinjiang autonomous region.

A Kashmir yet to come
The pandemic has inspired thinking on the complete restructuring of our world. It has shed light on the centrality of care workers and those at the forefront of our food systems.

file-20200504-83751-13af0k1.jpg

Kashmiri men ride a shikara, a traditional gondola, to catch fish in the interiors of the Dal Lake in Srinagar, Indian-occupied Kashmir, April 25, 2020. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
It is forcing us to imagine “a world we do not yet know and cannot describe” as scholar Vafa Ghazavi recently wrote.

A just world won’t emerge as if by magic. We will need to fight for it.

The LoC does not signal the closure of Kashmir’s forms and futures. It is a site of potentiality, for a Kashmir yet to come.

This Kashmir would not be held back by the paucity of our imagination or the lack of available language. It would be a Kashmir where Kashmiris can freely choose learning, laughter and living.

https://theconversation.com/india-u...mic-to-exploit-human-rights-in-kashmir-137682

things will settle down once people expelled from kashmir return , and more people getting domicile status and land to settle in kashmir .
 
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Two Indian Army personnel injured in LoC explosion

Two Indian Army personnel, including a Major, were injured in an explosion along the Line of Control (LoC) in Nowshera sector of Jammu division’s Rajouri district on Thursday, officials said.

“A major and a JCO (junior commissioned officer) were injured when they inadvertently stepped on to a landmine along the LoC in Nowshera sector on Thursday morning. They were on a patrol in a forward area,” said a defence official.

The injured have been shifted to Command Hospital in Udhampur for treatment. They are stable, he added. Usually, landmines, which are light in weight, drift away during monsoon and pose a threat to the security personnel on patrol duty.

 
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Army officer among 3 personnel injured in Pak firing along LoC in Rajouri

RAJOURI: Three Army personnel including an officer were injured Tuesday as Pakistani troops violated ceasefire by using heavy fire and mortar shells along the Line of Control in Rajouri district of Jammu and Kashmir, officials said.

The Indian Army launched a befitting retaliation to the Pakistani firing and shelling in Sunderbani sector, they said. "Pakistan initiated the unprovoked ceasefire violation by firing with small arms and intense shelling with mortars. Some injuries have been reported (on our side)," a defence spokesman said, based on preliminary information.

However, official sources said three army personnel including an officer, who were manning a forward post, were injured in the incident. The Pakistani army has also suffered casualties in the retaliatory action but the details are awaited, the sources said.


 
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We shouldn't worry about Indian's tears and cries.
Suicide or no suicide, what difference does it makes!!
Where are these Indians when innocent young Kashmiris are brutally killed by Indian forces regularly!!
 
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This is really sad. These soldiers needs proper recognition regarding their deaths at loc due to Pakistani firing response. Atleast in this way it may calm their families with state honoring them but instead labeling their deaths as suicides is just pathetic. No matter how much Indian govt and their loser army hides their attrition rate due to Pakistani firing, truth always make their way out. This video just proved what I said.
 
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anyone killed by pakistani firing or freedom fighter's firing they make him incident and sucide . and they themselves blaming every country for hiding deaths . what a country india is
 
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It is sad that this young man has been denied the valour of being killed by his enemy, many many indian soldiers are killed by us, but politics deny them a soldiers death.
 
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lack of transparency or truth in Indian institutions they just do cover ups. regarding Pakistan & Kashmir killing there men
 
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