Banglar Bir
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- Reuters
- Published at 05:24 PM May 12, 2017
Masked Kashmiri students throw stones during clashes with Indian government forces in Srinagar on May 11, 2017. AFP
India's former RAW chief, AS Dulat, said the Kashmir situation has never been so bad
Images of students confronting police on campuses have come to symbolise Kashmiri protests against Indian rule as much as gun-toting militants in fatigues, in what security officials and separatist leaders say is a dangerous new phase of the conflict.
The sharp rise in violence in recent weeks is more spontaneous than before, complicating the task of Indian security forces trained largely in counter-insurgency and poorly equipped to contain broader unrest.
A political stalemate in India’s only Muslim-majority state is a further hurdle to resolving the long-running Kashmir dispute, as is rising Hindu nationalism in some parts of India since Prime Minister Narendra Modi came to power in 2014.
When security forces entered a college last month in Pulwama, 30-km south of Kashmir’s summer capital of Srinagar, hundreds of students threw stones at their vehicles before fighting pitched battles inside college corridors and bathrooms.
Within days, widespread protests forced most colleges and secondary schools in Indian-controlled Kashmir to close. Teenaged girls took to the streets for the first time in years. At least 100 protesters were wounded.
A local police chief said security forces were steering clear of campuses to avoid provoking more violence.
Police were appealing to parents to ensure children “do not indulge” in violence, Kashmir inspector general of police SJM Gillani said, adding that most areas were back under control.
Unrest has simmered in Kashmir, home to a separatist movement for decades, since last July, when a popular militant leader was killed, sparking months of clashes that left more than 90 civilians dead.
One of the world’s oldest conflicts, Kashmir’s troubles began when the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir was divided in 1947 between India and Pakistan, nuclear-armed rivals who fought two of three wars over the region.
An insurgency that erupted in 1989 against India has eased in recent years, but most Kashmiris yearn for independence, accuse security forces of widespread rights abuses and some support the few hundred militants still fighting.
Delhi demands end to violence
India’s former spy chief, AS Dulat, said the Kashmir situation “has never been so bad”.
Still, New Delhi has stuck to its tough line, demanding an end to violence before talking with separatists. “All these activities of stone pelting have to stop. Then will the government consider talking,” said KS Dhatwalia, a home ministry spokesman.
Politicians also say that, in contrast to earlier unrest, there is no obvious leader to negotiate with.
Previous waves of violence in 2008 and 2010 fizzled out after a year or so as local people tired of shutdowns. There is little sign the current protests will end soon, however.
‘India losing Kashmir’
Shabir Ahmad, a doctor, said he began supporting militants and protesters after his brother-in-law, 21, was shot dead in Chadoora amid a stand-off with security forces. “India is losing Kashmir because of its own doing,” the 35-year-old said at his family home, sitting next to his grieving mother-in-law.
Some Kashmiris warn that rising nationalist sentiment across parts of India, led by Modi’s hardline Hindu supporters, is deepening their sense of estrangement.
Modi last month asked Kashmiri youngsters to choose between “tourism and terrorism”, comments that angered locals.
Several Kashmiris living in ‘mainland’ India have returned home after facing discrimination, including student Hashim Sofi, 27, who arrived at his hostel room in Rajasthan state to a T-shirt with “Kashmiri dog” scribbled on the front.
“They are saying that all Kashmiris are terrorists,” he said by telephone.
http://www.dhakatribune.com/world/2...ng-foot-police-loosening-indias-grip-kashmir/