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Thousands Protest against India for killing a Kashmiri Civilian.

Kompromat

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Thousands Protest Indian Kashmir Killing

The protesters say soldiers shot Mushtaq Ahmed Mir during a clash between Muslim militants and Indian troops

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Kashmiri villagers carry the body of a local businessman Mushtaq Ahmed Mir during a protest in Shadi Marg, south of Srinagar, 24 Jan 2009

Thousands of people protested Sunday in the streets of Indian-controlled Kashmir, accusing the Indian army of killing a civilian.

Police say Mushtaq Ahmed Mir was killed late Saturday in the crossfire during a clash between Muslim militants and Indian troops.

The protesters say soldiers shot Mir in the conflict.

In an incident Friday, police say one civilian was killed and several people were wounded when law enforcement officers opened fire on demonstrators in the same region.

Investigators say the protest erupted after police set up a road block in a village about 30 kilometers north of Srinagar, the region's largest city. Demonstrators complained the barrier blocked the route to a Muslim shrine.

Anti-India sentiment is strong in Muslim-majority Kashmir. Islamic separatists in the region have been fighting for decades for independence from India or a merger with Muslim-majority Pakistan.

:cry:
 
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Didn't the authorities claim that he was a militant killed for trying to enter India.:tdown:
 
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What's the point in posting 1 year old news(24th Jan 2009) ?? What do u wnat to achieve other than to flame and troll.
 
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What's the point in posting 1 year old news(24th Jan 2009) ?? What do u wnat to achieve other than to flame and troll.

Just bringing a crime to discussion done a few months ago.

If one can discuss holocaust after 60 years whats so wrong with Kashmir?;)
 
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This is no big deal where their is regular operations by army. I regret the killing but such incidence are unavoidable. The key is to make sure that you do not create a situation where army needs to be called in. When Kashmir's supported militants to attack armed forces they should have realized this kind of incidence will happen, same thing happened in Punjab in India. Now their is no terrorist in Punjab so no such incidences.

There is absolutely no way of avoid collateral damage in conflict scenario.

The Kashmiri had maximum freedom, no one from outside can come and take their land and they were ruled by Kashmiri's themselves. They spoiled the atmosphere by taking route of violence, they are also responsible for what is happening there.
 
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India bashing and trolling at its best by posting 1 year old article.please check the date of the article when you google - 'protest against India in kashmir'.:tdown::disagree:
 
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Police said Mushtaq Ahmad Mir died in crossfire during a clash between Muslim militants and Indian troops late on Saturday. But villagers in the southern district of Pulwama said Mir, a father-of-four, was used as a 'human shield' by the soldiers and killed by them when militants escaped from a siege.

Man now that's really pathetic.
 
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The Canadian Press: Hundreds of people protest in Indian Kashmir over army's alleged killing of civilian

A local resident, Shabir Ahmed, said army soldiers fatally shot Mushtaq Ahmed Mir, a local businessman, during Saturday's search operation.

Col. Vineet Sood, an army officer, denied the protesters' accusation and said Mir was hit by bullets when suspected rebels fired at Indian soldiers.

Chanting "Down with India" and "We want freedom" on Sunday, the protesters blocked a highway passing through Kalampora, a village 20 miles (35 kilometres) south of Srinagar, as they waited for authorities to hand over Mir's body, said police officer Farooq Ahmed. Srinagar is the main city in the Indian portion of Kashmir.
 
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^^^ By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS :lol::disagree:

give some neutral source.


Buried Evidence: Report on Indian Army Crimes in Kashmir

Posted by Ka Frank on December 8, 2009



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Indian Army in action in Kashmir

BURIED EVIDENCE: Unknown, Unmarked, and Mass Graves in Indian-administered Kashmir

International People’s Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Kashmir (IPTK) announces the release of its report at a press conference on Wednesday, December 02, 2009, in Srinagar, Kashmir.

BURIED EVIDENCE documents 2,700 unknown, unmarked, and mass graves, containing 2,943+ bodies, across 55 villages in Bandipora, Baramulla, and Kupwara districts of Kashmir, based on applied research conducted between November 2006-November 2009.

The graveyards investigated by IPTK entomb bodies of those murdered in encounter and fake encounter killings between 1990-2009. These graves include bodies of extrajudicial, summary, and arbitrary executions, as well as massacres committed by the Indian military and paramilitary forces. Of these graves, 2,373 (87.9 percent) were unnamed. Of these graves, 154 contained two bodies each and 23 contained more than two cadavers. Within these 23 graves, the number of bodies ranged from 3 to 17.

A mass grave may be identified as containing more than one, and usually unidentified, human cadaver. Scholars refer to mass graves as resulting from crimes against humanity, war crimes, or genocide. If the intent of a mass grave is to execute death with impunity, with intent to kill more than one, and to forge an unremitting representation of death, then, to that extent, the graves in Bandipora, Baramulla, and Kupwara are part of a collective burial by India’s military and paramilitary, creating a landscape of “mass burial.”

Post-death, the bodies of the victims were routinely handled by military and paramilitary personnel, including the local police. The bodies were then brought to the “secret graveyards” primarily by personnel of the Jammu and Kashmir Police. The graves were constructed by local gravediggers and caretakers, buried individually when possible, and specifically not en mass, in keeping with Islamic religious sensibilities.

The graves, with few exceptions, hold bodies of men. Violence against civilian men has expanded spaces for enacting violence against women. Women have been forced to disproportionately assume the task of caregiving to disintegrated families and undertake the work of seeking justice following disappearances and deaths. These graveyards have been placed next to fields, schools, and homes, largely on community land, and their affect on the local community is daunting.

The Indian Armed Forces and the Jammu and Kashmir Police routinely claim the dead buried in unknown and unmarked graves to be “foreign militants/terrorists.” They claim that the dead were unidentified foreign or Kashmiri militants killed while infiltrating across the border areas into Kashmir or travelling from Kashmir into Pakistan to seek arms training. Official state discourse conflates cross-border militancy with present nonviolent struggles by local Kashmiri groups for political and territorial self-determination, portraying local resistance as “terrorist” activity.

Exhumation and identification have not occurred in sizeable cases. Where they have been undertaken, in various instances, “encounter” killings across Kashmir have, in fact, been authenticated as “fake encounter” killings. In instances where, post-burial, bodies have been identified, two methods have been used prevalently. These are 1. Exhumation; and 2. Identification through the use of photographs.

The report also examines 50 alleged “encounter” killings by Indian security forces in numerous districts in Kashmir. Of these persons, 39 were of Muslim descent; 4 were of Hindu descent; 7 were not determined. Of these cases, 49 were labelled militants/foreign insurgents by security forces and one body that was drowned. Of these, following investigations, 47 were found killed in fake encounters and one was identifiable as a local militant.

IPTK has been able to study only partial areas within 3 of 10 districts in Kashmir, and our findings and very preliminary evidence point to the severity of existing conditions. If independent investigations were to be undertaken in all 10 districts, it is reasonable to assume that the 8,000+ enforced disappearances since 1989 would correlate with the number of bodies in unknown, unmarked, and mass graves.


Allegations

The methodical and planned use of killing and violence in Indian-administered Kashmir constitutes crimes against humanity in the context of an ongoing conflict. The Indian state’s governance of Indian-administered Kashmir requires the use of discipline and death as techniques of social control. Discipline is affected through military presence, surveillance, punishment, and fear. Death is disbursed through “extrajudicial” means and those authorized by law. These techniques of rule are used to kill, and create fear of not just death but of murder.

Mass and intensified extrajudicial killings have been part of a sustained and widespread offensive by the military and paramilitary institutions of the Indian state against civilians of Jammu and Kashmir. IPTK asks that the evidence put forward in this report be examined, verified, and reframed as relevant by credible, independent, and international bodies, and that international institutions ask that the Government of India comply with such investigations.

We note that the international community and institutions have not examined the supposition of crimes against humanity in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. We note that the United Nations and its member states have remained ineffective in containing and halting the adverse consequences of the Indians state’s militarization in Kashmir.

We ask that evidence from unknown, unmarked, and mass graves in Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir be used to seek justice, through the sentencing of criminals and other judicial and social processes. As well, the existence of these graves, and how they came to be, may be understood as indicative of the effects and issue of militarization, and the issues pertaining to militarization itself must be addressed seriously and expeditiously.

The violences of militarization in Indian-administered Kashmir, between 1989-2009, have resulted in 70,000+ deaths, including through extrajudicial or “fake encounter” executions, custodial brutality, and other means. In the enduring conflict, 6, 67,000 military and paramilitary personnel continue to act with impunity to regulate movement, law, and order across Kashmir. The Indian state itself, through its legal, political, and military actions, has demonstrated the existence of a state of continuing conflict within Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir.

BURIED EVIDENCE is authored by Angana P. Chatterji, Parvez Imroz, Gautam Navlakha, Zahir-Ud-Din, Mihir Desai, and Khurram Parvez.

Dr. Angana P. Chatterji is Convener IPTK and Professor, Anthropology, California Institute of Integral Studies. Advocate Parvez Imroz is Convener IPTK and Founder, Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society. Gautam Navlakha is Convener IPTK and Editorial Consultant, Economic and Political Weekly.

Zahir-Ud-Din is Convener IPTK and Vice-President, Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society. Mihir Desai is Legal Counsel IPTK and Lawyer, Mumbai High Court and Supreme Court of India. Khurram Parvez is Liaison IPTK and Programme Coordinator, Jammu and Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society.

Report, photographs, video clips available at: International People's Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Indian-Administered Kashmir

Queries may be directed to: kparvez@kashmirprocess. org

Buried Evidence: Report on Indian Army Crimes in Kashmir Revolution in South Asia
 
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