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Calls for revenge attacks against Kashmiris after suicide bomber kills 42 Indian troopers in the disputed region.
Members of Hindu Sena, a right-wing Hindu group, burn an effigy depicting Pakistan's PM Imran Khan in New Delhi
Thursday's suicide attack on Indian forces in India-administered Kashmir has triggered a wave of hate and revenge attacks against Kashmiris residing in different parts of mainland India.
Passions have been running high against Kashmiri Muslims since Thursday when 20-year-old Adil Dar rammed his car filled with explosives into a convoy carrying Indian paramilitary forces, killing 42 of them.
'Shoot the traitors'
Since Thursday, dozens of Kashmiris living outside the disputed Himalayan region have been threatened, assaulted or forced to vacate their residences.
Nisar Ahmad (name changed), 23, who is studying physics at an institute in Dehradun, capital of the northern Uttarakhand state, told Al Jazeera that Kashmiri students were beaten by a mob on Friday.
"Following the suicide attack, two Kashmiri students were ruthlessly beaten by a mob in Sudhowala area. We have not even ventured out of our rooms since the attack."
Ahmad said a group of around 70 people took out a rally in the area on Saturday, "chanting slogans like 'shoot the traitor Kashmiris', 'drive them out'".
"The situation here is very tense. We feel very insecure here," he said. "We want to go back to our home but don't understand how. We are scared of even moving out of our rooms. Our supplies are finished," he said.
Asma Ashraf, 24, a student of science in Dehradun, told Al Jazeera that she fears for her life after her hostel was "surrounded by a mob".
"They asked the college authorities to throw the Kashmiris out," she said.
Muhammad Dawood, 23, who is from north Kashmir's Baramulla district and studies geology in Dehradun, told Al Jazeera that he is "unable to move out after attacks by Hindu right-wing mobs".
"Our landlady saved us as the mob entered our room. I hid in a bathroom," Dawood said, adding that more than 20 students are stuck and unable to move out "fearing more attacks on their way".
In the Indian capital, New Delhi, 25-year-old Sara Khursheed told Al Jazeera the Kashmiris are being looked at with "suspicion after the attack".
"Yesterday, I was returning home from work. A passer-by shouted at me and said these Kashmiris are happy over the killings. We fear we might be thrown out by our landlords," she said.
Bashir, 24, who is pursuing engineering in Haryana state's Ambala city, said "violent mobs threatened" Kashmiri students to leave their rented places "immediately through announcements on loudspeakers".
Vikas Verma, a member of Bajrang Dal - a far-right Hindu group with links to the ruling BJP and known for attacks against minorities in India, accused the Kashmiri students of "insulting the Indian paramilitary troopers on WhatsApp".
"They have written against the forces on social media. We have given these students 24 hours to leave, or else they will face the consequences," said Verma from Dehradun.
A demonstrator reacts next to burning cars during a protest in Jammu against the suicide attack
On Friday, Muslim residents in Jammu accused right-wing groups of setting their vehicles on fire and raising slogans against the Kashmiris residing in the city.
"In the Hindu majority areas of Jammu, wherever they found a car with a Kashmiri number plate, they set it ablaze. Muslims fear to go out. I have not been to work for the past two days," Suhail Ahmad, a resident of Jammu, said.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019...ia-deadly-suicide-attack-190216150244206.html
Kashmiri Shopkeepers ‘Attacked’ in Patna, Asked to Leave Bihar
https://www.newsclick.in/kashmiri-shopkeepers-attacked-patna-asked-leave-bihar
Members of Hindu Sena, a right-wing Hindu group, burn an effigy depicting Pakistan's PM Imran Khan in New Delhi
Thursday's suicide attack on Indian forces in India-administered Kashmir has triggered a wave of hate and revenge attacks against Kashmiris residing in different parts of mainland India.
Passions have been running high against Kashmiri Muslims since Thursday when 20-year-old Adil Dar rammed his car filled with explosives into a convoy carrying Indian paramilitary forces, killing 42 of them.
'Shoot the traitors'
Since Thursday, dozens of Kashmiris living outside the disputed Himalayan region have been threatened, assaulted or forced to vacate their residences.
Nisar Ahmad (name changed), 23, who is studying physics at an institute in Dehradun, capital of the northern Uttarakhand state, told Al Jazeera that Kashmiri students were beaten by a mob on Friday.
"Following the suicide attack, two Kashmiri students were ruthlessly beaten by a mob in Sudhowala area. We have not even ventured out of our rooms since the attack."
Ahmad said a group of around 70 people took out a rally in the area on Saturday, "chanting slogans like 'shoot the traitor Kashmiris', 'drive them out'".
"The situation here is very tense. We feel very insecure here," he said. "We want to go back to our home but don't understand how. We are scared of even moving out of our rooms. Our supplies are finished," he said.
Asma Ashraf, 24, a student of science in Dehradun, told Al Jazeera that she fears for her life after her hostel was "surrounded by a mob".
"They asked the college authorities to throw the Kashmiris out," she said.
Muhammad Dawood, 23, who is from north Kashmir's Baramulla district and studies geology in Dehradun, told Al Jazeera that he is "unable to move out after attacks by Hindu right-wing mobs".
"Our landlady saved us as the mob entered our room. I hid in a bathroom," Dawood said, adding that more than 20 students are stuck and unable to move out "fearing more attacks on their way".
In the Indian capital, New Delhi, 25-year-old Sara Khursheed told Al Jazeera the Kashmiris are being looked at with "suspicion after the attack".
"Yesterday, I was returning home from work. A passer-by shouted at me and said these Kashmiris are happy over the killings. We fear we might be thrown out by our landlords," she said.
Bashir, 24, who is pursuing engineering in Haryana state's Ambala city, said "violent mobs threatened" Kashmiri students to leave their rented places "immediately through announcements on loudspeakers".
Vikas Verma, a member of Bajrang Dal - a far-right Hindu group with links to the ruling BJP and known for attacks against minorities in India, accused the Kashmiri students of "insulting the Indian paramilitary troopers on WhatsApp".
"They have written against the forces on social media. We have given these students 24 hours to leave, or else they will face the consequences," said Verma from Dehradun.
A demonstrator reacts next to burning cars during a protest in Jammu against the suicide attack
On Friday, Muslim residents in Jammu accused right-wing groups of setting their vehicles on fire and raising slogans against the Kashmiris residing in the city.
"In the Hindu majority areas of Jammu, wherever they found a car with a Kashmiri number plate, they set it ablaze. Muslims fear to go out. I have not been to work for the past two days," Suhail Ahmad, a resident of Jammu, said.
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019...ia-deadly-suicide-attack-190216150244206.html
Kashmiri Shopkeepers ‘Attacked’ in Patna, Asked to Leave Bihar
https://www.newsclick.in/kashmiri-shopkeepers-attacked-patna-asked-leave-bihar
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