Indian army locks down Kashmir to prevent protests
https://parstoday.ir/en/news/world-i97378-indian_army_locks_down_kashmir_to_prevent_protests
Indian authorities have put pro-independence leaders in New Delhi-controlled Kashmir under house arrest and enforced a security lockdown on the region’s main city to foil a planned march against the recent civilian killings by India’s troops.
(last modified 2021-04-13T02:52:40+00:00 )
Dec 17, 2018 06:29 UTC
  • Indian army locks down Kashmir to prevent protests

Indian authorities have put pro-independence leaders in New Delhi-controlled Kashmir under house arrest and enforced a security lockdown on the region’s main city to foil a planned march against the recent civilian killings by India’s troops.

According to Press TV, people in the Indian-administered Kashmir were set to march toward an army headquarters in Srinagar on Monday against the recent killing of at least seven civilians during anti-New Delhi protests on Saturday.

Security forces were deployed to various parts of Srinagar on Monday and sealed off all the roads leading to the army’s main garrison in the city.

They also put two pro-independence Leaders, Syed Ali Shah Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, under house arrest to prevent them from leading the march.

In a statement late on Sunday, the army warned the Kashmiri people against what it called trouble making.

“Army advises people not to fall prey to such designs of anti-national forces,” it said.

Authorities also closed shops, government offices and banks in Srinagar and a nearby district. Mobile internet and train services have also been shut down.

The rally was called in response to the killing of seven people during demonstration on Saturday. One Indian soldier was also killed.

Unrest has intensified over recent weeks between government forces and pro-independence fighters, who are seeking an end to the Indian rule in the disputed valley.

The Muslim-majority region has been divided between India and Pakistan but is claimed in full by both countries since they partitioned and gained independence from Britain in 1947.

India accuses Pakistan of supporting pro-independence fighters, an allegation rejected by Islamabad, which in turn, is critical of India’s heavy military deployment to Kashmir and its crackdown against the region’s Muslim population.

On Sunday, Pakistani Prime Minster Imarn Khan condemned the latest violence in a Twitter post, saying he would raise India’s “human rights violations” at the United Nations.

“Only dialogue and not violence and killings will resolve this conflict,” he wrote.

ME