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Sheikh Abdul Aziz Killed - Violence Flares in Kashmir


Srinagar (PTI): Accusing the Jammu and Kashmir administration of failing to uphold the rule of law in the state, the People's Democratic Party (PDP) on Saturday said law enforcing agencies have resorted to "indiscriminate" arrests of youth across the Valley.

PDP General Secretary Nizamudin Bhat and Youth leader Bashir Assad in a joint statement took strong exception to the indiscriminate arrests made by law enforcing agencies in rural and urban areas of Kashmir.

"Repeating what was done in 1989, the law enforcing agencies clamped down on the local media, thrashed demonstrators and journalists, broke into the homes and intimidated the inhabitants, including the elderly, children and women," they said.

The PDP leaders alleged that the administration has rounded up hundreds of peaceful protesters and booked many of them under Public Safety Act (PSA).

They said the situation can be handled through bold political initiatives and not through repressive measures.

"It is unfortunate that the Government of India chose not to provide effective means of assuaging people's anxiety over the economic blockade of the Valley. When people came out to protest peacefully, the government deliberately created a confrontationist situation," they added.

It seems that law enforcing agencies are not able to come to the grip of the things and have unleashed a rein of terror, the PDP leaders said and cautioned that such strong arm tactics would have far reaching consequences.
 
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No question of peace formula: SAYSS

Press Trust Of India
Jammu, August 30, 2008
First Published: 12:47 IST(30/8/2008)
Last Updated: 14:27 IST(30/8/2008)


Talks will resume on Saturday between the Jammu and Kashmir governor's mediator and the group spearheading the agitation over the Amarnath land row amidst reports that a peace formula was in the making.

SS Bloeria will hold talks with the Shri Amarnath Yatra Sangarsh Samiti (SAYSS) in Jammu on the issue. The talks were deferred over the last two days because Bloeria was unwell.

Amidst reports of peace formula in the offing, the group spokesman said there was no such proposal and the government had to concede to the main demand of restoring the land to the Shrine Board for yatra use.

"Where arises the question of a peace formula or compromise formula when the fourth round of talks between governor's panel and the samiti's committee has not taken place so far?

"During the first three rounds of talk on August 23, we have already given written demands to the governor's panel headed by his advisor SS Bloeria," SAYSS spokesperson Narinder Singh said in Jammu.

"The fourth round of talks was delayed twice and is now scheduled for Saturday and we are waiting for it to be held," he said, adding "the government has to respond to our demands and then the Samiti will decide on it".

Referring to the peace formula, the Samiti's spokesperson said such repots were deliberately being "planted" in the electronic media to create confusion among the people in Jammu and "please separatists and other leaders of Kashmir."

He also alleged that People's Democratic Party (PDP) patron and former Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed was also placing hurdles in resolving the issue.

No question of peace formula: SAYSS- Hindustan Times
 
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:lol: lolz Flintock thank you for the video but sorry mate what you were trying to portray not only failed but the video also proved that thousands of Kashmiris were carying Pakistani flags chanting solagns for freedom and Pakistan.

lolz also who is going to believe the BJP member who is saying that economic blockade was preparated by ISI :P

hmmm so all those trucks which were stopped by BJP members and Hindu fanatic groups as these were carrying food items for Kashmir valley, were paid by ISI ;)
 
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SRINAGAR: Thousands of Kashmiris thronged shops on Tuesday as authorities lifted a nine-day-old curfew in Indian-held Kashmir, coinciding with the start of the Ramazan.

The lifting of the curfew also followed the release on Monday of three senior Kashmiri separatist leaders - Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Syed Ali Geelani and Yasin Malik. Police official Pervez Ahmed said the curfew had been relaxed as a ‘goodwill gesture’ for Ramazan.

“There has been no untoward incident since morning,” he said, as thousands of riot police maintained a strong presence across the disputed region. However, Divisional Commissioner Masud Samoon said, “The curfew can be re-imposed if the situation so warranted.” Offices, banks and shops opened in Srinagar for the first time in more than a week, and people thronged markets to buy food, medicines and cooking gas.

Officials also revoked an order for local television stations to suspend news programmes and broadcast only entertainment, officials said. afp
 
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Don't backtrack on agreement, Sangharsh Samiti warns government

Indo-Asian News Service
Jammu, September 06, 2008
First Published: 10:43 IST(6/9/2008)
Last Updated: 11:20 IST(6/9/2008)

Print



Six days after the Jammu and Kashmir government reached an agreement giving the Amarnath temple trust temporary use of a piece of forest land, the Shri Amarnath Yatra Sangharsh Samiti on Friday warned the government against "backtracking" on the accord or it would renew its agitation.

"The agitation was suspended and not called off. The government should bear this in mind," Shri Amarnath Yatra Sangharash Samiti convenor Leela Karan Sharma told media persons on Friday evening.

He voiced his irritation over the government silence on the issue of those detained under the Public Safety Act, which allows the authorities to detain anyone for two years without offering any explanation to the courts.

Sharma said according to the agreement, criminal cases against the protesters who took part in the 63-day-long agitation demanding return of the land to Shri Amarnath Shrine Board (SASB) would be withdrawn.

Governor N.N. Vohra's four-member panel, headed by his advisor (home) S.S. Bloeria, and Sharma signed an accord Aug 31, setting aside 100 acres of land "exclusively" for the shrine board during the annual Hindu pilgrimage to the cave shrine devoted to Lord Shiva in the Kashmir Himalayas.

"If the government continues to backtrack on the agreement, the Sangharsh Samiti would not hesitate to revive the suspended agitation," he said.

Don't backtrack on agreement, Sangharsh Samiti warns government- Hindustan Times
 
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SRINAGAR, India (AFP) — One demonstrator was killed as fresh anti-India protests erupted in Indian Kashmir and a one-day strike called by Muslim separatists brought the Himalayan region to a standstill.

The 20-year-old man was killed when police fired rubber bullets and teargas at hundreds of stone-pelting demonstrators in Srinagar, Indian Kashmir's summer capital, doctors and residents said.

"The young man was killed when a rubber bullet lodged in his heart," said Dr. Wasim Ahmed at Srinagar's main hospital.

Police could not be immediately reached for comment on the death.

Angry demonstrators carried the body of the man shoulder-high through the city centre shouting "We want freedom" and "Allah is great", and went on a rampage, burning tyres and setting up roadblocks.


"They (Indians) have shot dead another innocent and unarmed protester. We're not going to take this lying down," the region's leading moderate separatist politician, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, told AFP from his family compound in Srinagar where he was placed under house arrest on Friday.

"We will definitely call for more protests," he said.

Since June, at least 40 Muslims and three Hindus have died in police shootings in the Kashmir valley and the mainly Hindu area of Jammu, further to the south, as authorities have struggled to quell protests.

Saturday's strike, which closed shops, schools, banks and offices in Srinagar, was one of a string of shutdowns and demonstrations called by separatists in the Muslim-majority Himalayan territory.

"The strike is to protest against India's rule in Kashmir," Farooq said.

There were similar shutdowns in other towns of the Kashmir valley, according to police and residents.

Farooq, who is also the region's chief Muslim cleric, was put under house arrest along with two other top separatist leaders, Syed Ali Geelani and Yasin Malik, as security forces struggled to contain anti-India protests.

In the past few months, the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley has witnessed the biggest separatist demonstrations since the revolt against New Delhi's rule erupted in 1989.

The recent flare-up in unrest prompted by a row about land near a Hindu shrine high in the Himalayas has triggered a heavy crackdown by Indian security forces.

"The strike is also to protest the crackdown on pro-freedom demonstrations," said Farooq.

Last week, authorities lifted a nine-day curfew -- the longest to be imposed since the anti-India militancy was at its peak in the early 1990s -- to coincide with the start of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

The bitter insurgency in Indian Kashmir has claimed more than 43,000 lives over nearly two decades.

Tensions had eased in the wake of a peace process begun in 2004 between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan aimed at settling their disputes including the future of Kashmir, trigger of two of their three wars.

Kashmir is held in part by Pakistan and India, but claimed in full by both.

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What India fails to understand here is that with each passing day, Kashmir is slipping down from their hands. Answering the protest with a bullet is never a solution. I wonder how long it will take them to understand this. Every time there is a protest, someone gets killed and it adds to the fury of already volatile situation.

It's time for civil society, media & intellectuals of India to convince GOI to seriously rethink Kashmir strategy. Blunders are being done by Indian Forces in Kashmir and no one in India seems bothered.
 
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By Soutik Biswas
BBC News, Srinagar | 6 Sep 2008

9cbe234c2cfd62a922aab394651888cc.jpg


The newspaper headlines in the mainly Muslim valley in India-administered Kashmir say it all.

'Freedom is sweet, no matter how it comes', says one. 'People pray for freedom,' chimes another, reporting on Friday prayers in the valley.

A row over transferring land for a Hindu pilgrimage escalated into a nationalist upsurge in the valley in recent months. Some 30 people have died after security forces fired on protests here. Many say the relative calm at present is just the lull before another storm.

In the eye of the storm is the demand for azadi (freedom) for people living in the valley; the latest bout of unrest has brought the contentious issue back into the limelight again.

For many Indians the demand strikes at the heart of the 'idea of India', of a nation that is capable of handling diversity and staying united.

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State of mind

But for many of the majority Muslims living in the valley, freedom is the only way to get their pride back. It is the only way, they say, India can redeem itself in the hearts and minds of the Kashmiri.

No wonder, the streets in the valley were agog with cries for freedom during the huge protest processions that the recent crisis triggered off.

People have waved Pakistani flags and belted out pro-Pakistani slogans although, as Booker-prize winning writer Arundhati Roy says, it "would be a mistake to assume that the public expression of affection for Pakistan automatically translates into a desire to accede to Pakistan".

This time, the call for Kashmiri freedom is coming from a generation of young and restless men and women who grew up during the troubled 1990's when the valley was wracked by separatist insurgency.

On Kashmir streets, the yearning for freedom is a state of mind.

In a middle-class neighbourhood in Budgam where two young men were killed by security forces during recent protests, Sheikh Suhail, a 24-year-old mass communications student, makes no bones about it.

"We want azadi," he says, days after he buried a friend who was shot down in the protest.

"Nobody quite knows what it will mean for us. We don't know whether we will survive it. I only know that we want freedom from both India and Pakistan," he says.


Across town, in the bustling Dalgate area, Sayed Zubair, a government school teacher, is seething after the security forces shot down his elderly neighbour during a recent curfew.

"We live in fear. A free Kashmir is the only solution to make us feel safe," he says.

His neighbour, Hilal Ahmed, a bank manager, says freedom can help Kashmiris get rid of a twin "stigma".

"India says it is the biggest democracy in the world. Living in Kashmir, we do not get any sense of that. Being a Kashmiri is a curse, being a Muslim is a crime. So we are doubly disadvantaged in these troubled times.

"The only way to set things right is to India get out of our lives and leave us free."

So what does freedom mean for most Kashmiris?

Does it mean a sovereign state? Or does it mean greater autonomy? Many people here say that they prefer a form of self-rule. Does freedom from India mean accession with Pakistan? Or does freedom mean India pulling out its half a million or so troops in the state?

Eroded autonomy

For people like Suhail freedom is an intense sentiment. It is, they say, a breaking off from the "oppressive shackles" of the Indian state. For others like political scientist Dr Noor Ahmad Baba and women's activist Dr Hameeda Nayeem, it is something more substantial.

Many analysts say that the autonomy that Kashmir enjoys under the Indian constitution has been eroded considerably and it is time that the Indian government worked out a new deal for its people.

Dr Noor Ahmed Baba says that when most Kashmiris say they want freedom, they do not necessarily mean seceding from India.

"The overwhelming people here want independence. But it does not mean a sovereign state. It could be a higher degree of autonomy rooted in a larger understanding with India and Pakistan, both of whom who would pledge not to interfere.

"For us freedom also means more choices about reviving our old trade, cultural and economic roots. We want to come out of seclusion," he says.


Dr Hameeda Nayeem says Kashmiris want self-governance and great internal sovereignty - that is what freedom could essentially mean.

"Let us define self-governance. Whether it will be more autonomy or self-rule. Our borders could be jointly managed by India and Pakistan. We want soft borders and free flow of goods."

She points to the example of the tiny kingdom of Bhutan and wonders why Kashmir cannot have the status of a "protected state" of India like Bhutan.

How could a beautiful valley - with an approximate area 15,520 sq km, only a sixth of the size of Bhutan - cope as an independent country?

'Not realistic'

Omar Abdullah, head of the mainstream National Conference party, admits that that "freedom sentiment" is serious, but has grave doubts about its feasibility.

"How realistic is it? Will Kashmir ever be really free even if it becomes independent, surrounded as it is by India, China and Pakistan?" he wonders.

"How free can it be? What happens to Pakistan-administered Kashmir?

"Freedom is not an option. I have yet to see a model of freedom which convinces me that Jammu and Kashmir as a viable independent entity".

The irony is that nothing that is being debated in the valley is new.

The builder of modern India and its first prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, spoke about a plebiscite in Kashmir and independence for the state with its defence guaranteed by both India and Pakistan.

And Mr Nehru's letter to the maharajah of Kashmir four months after India's independence in 1947 was also chillingly prescient.

"It is of the most vital importance that Kashmir should remain with the Indian Union," he wrote.

"But, however much we may want this, it cannot be done except through the goodwill of the mass of the population.

"Even if military forces held Kashmir for a while a later consequence may be a strong reaction against this.

"Essentially, therefore, this is a problem of psychological approach to the mass of the people and of making them feel they will be benefited by being in the Indian Union.

"If the average Muslim feels that he has no safe and secure place in the Union, then obviously he will look elsewhere. Our basic policy must keep this in view, or else we fail."
 
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Many analysts say that the autonomy that Kashmir enjoys under the Indian constitution has been eroded considerably and it is time that the Indian government worked out a new deal for its people.

Dr Noor Ahmed Baba says that when most Kashmiris say they want freedom, they do not necessarily mean seceding from India.

"The overwhelming people here want independence. But it does not mean a sovereign state. It could be a higher degree of autonomy rooted in a larger understanding with India and Pakistan, both of whom who would pledge not to interfere.

"For us freedom also means more choices about reviving our old trade, cultural and economic roots. We want to come out of seclusion," he says.

Dr Hameeda Nayeem says Kashmiris want self-governance and great internal sovereignty - that is what freedom could essentially mean.

"Let us define self-governance. Whether it will be more autonomy or self-rule. Our borders could be jointly managed by India and Pakistan. We want soft borders and free flow of goods."

She points to the example of the tiny kingdom of Bhutan and wonders why Kashmir cannot have the status of a "protected state" of India like Bhutan.

How could a beautiful valley - with an approximate area 15,520 sq km, only a sixth of the size of Bhutan - cope as an independent country?

Arrange the plebiscite and it will only be determined after the results what kind of freedom Kashmiris are looking forward to.

I don't think that Kashmiris are raising Pakistani flag and thinking in their heart that they do not need to necessarily separate from India. They very well understand it will create ill feeling in India to see Pakistani flags being risen at protest.

The message is clear. It's up to India to interpret it right or ignore it. But ignoring it for long won't solve any problem India faces there.
 
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Militants stage anti-India rally in Azad Kashmir

* Several militant groups join rally, call for jihad in IHK

MUZAFFARABAD: Hundreds of Kashmiri militants and refugees from Indian-held Kashmir rallied in Azad Kashmir on Thursday, vowing a holy war (jihad) to free their homeland from India.

“Our path, our aim is jihad,” shouted protesters led by Syed Salahuddin, head of the main Kashmiri guerrilla group, Hizbul Mujahideen, as they marched through the streets of Muzaffarabad. Armed guards escorted Salahuddin as he made victory signs and shouted slogans along with the protesters while he was driven through the city in an open-topped jeep. “Until India ends the economic blockade of Kashmir Valley, lifts the curfew, halts atrocities and acknowledges the disputed status of the region, Pakistan should stop all relations with India,” he said in his speech. A nine-day curfew that had been imposed to quell widespread anti-India rallies in Indian-held Kashmir was lifted on Tuesday with the beginning of Ramazan. Salahuddin described the peace process launched by India and Pakistan more than four years ago as a ‘meaningless exercise’.


Leaders from several other militant groups, including the banned Lashkar-e-Taiba, also addressed the rally. Abu Saad Shabbir, a Lashkar leader, also called for jihad in the region to break India’s hold. Relations between India and Pakistan had improved after the peace process was launched, but Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said last month it was under threat after attacks in New Delhi. Pakistan has denied involvement. Until a few weeks ago, the two armies had stuck to a ceasefire agreed in late 2003. Lately, there have been several exchanges of fire across the Line of Control. reuters

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
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Militant groups trying to feed into the anti-India sentiment, bound to happen with no progress from the Indian side - I hope not many take the bait, though some inevitably will...
 
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Militant groups trying to feed into the anti-India sentiment, bound to happen with no progress from the Indian side - I hope not many take the bait, though some inevitably will...

Isn't Pakistan supposed to be fighting the War on Terror? So why did they allow terror groups to hold demonstrations and recruit people?


Some members here conveniently label the Jehadis attacking the Pakistani establishment as false-jehadis, and the ones fighting India as the true ones.
My point is, that you cannot control such things. You cannot decide which causes the jehadis choose to fight for.

Please don't justify it as "Bound to Happen". These things don't happen unless the state either turns a blind eye or actively supports them.
 
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Isn't Pakistan supposed to be fighting the War on Terror? So why did they allow terror groups to hold demonstrations and recruit people?


Some members here conveniently label the Jehadis attacking the Pakistani establishment as false-jehadis, and the ones fighting India as the true ones.
My point is, that you cannot control such things. You cannot decide which causes the jehadis choose to fight for.

Please don't justify it as "Bound to Happen". These things don't happen unless the state either turns a blind eye or actively supports them.

Too much on our plate, action against Kashmiri groups in the absence of some rapprochement between India and pakistan and/or movement on teh Kashmir issue, is not going to happen - and yes these things are 'bound to happen' just as even worse is happening in FATA.

There is no more material support for these groups, nor covering fire for infiltration - I think given the criticism of cooperation with the US on WoT, that will be limit for the GoP for now.
 
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Sunday, October 12, 2008

SRINAGAR: Indian troops have shot dead six Kashmiris in Srinagar on Sunday.

Four persons were killed in northern Kupwara and southern Poonch districts, both bordering Pakistan-administered Kashmir, a French news agency said. Two more were killed in Pulwama district, about 30 kilometres (18 miles) south of Srinagar.

The Muslim-majority Kashmir valley in recent months has seen some of the biggest pro-independence demonstrations in two decades.

Curfew has been imposed in some parts of the area after protests erupted here.
 
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