Some Kashmir restrictions eased

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INDIAN visitors gather to watch the Beating Retreat ceremony at the India Pakistan Wagah border post some 35km from Amritsar on Thursday. Photo: AFP

SRINAGAR (India): India has eased some restrictions on movement in Kashmir but phones and the internet remained cut off for a 12th day yesterday, a police official in the restive territory said. Jama Masjid, the main mosque in the Muslim-majority region with space for thousands of worshippers, also remained shut for Friday prayers, Munir Khan told AFP. With the central government fearing protests and unrest, Indianadministered Kashmir has been under lock down since August 4, a day before New Delhi stripped the region of its autonomy.

Tens of thousands of extra troops have been deployed — joining 500,000 already there — turning parts of the main city of Srinagar into a fortress of roadblocks and barbed wire. Restrictions in Jammu, the more peaceful Hindu-majority area, have already been lifted, and in the Kashmir Valley, the main hotbed of resistance to Indian rule, there has now been some easing too, Khan said. “You need to understand that restrictions and relaxations are area-wise. You can’t generalise them,” Khan told AFP.

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INDIAN visitors gather to watch the Beating Retreat ceremony at the India Pakistan Wagah border post some 35km from Amritsar on Thursday. Photo: AFP

The state administration has directed government employees to  report at work from yesterday through a radio announcement, news agency the Press Trust of India reported. Schools, shops and other business premises remained shut. PTI quoted an unnamed official as saying the situation in the Valley was being monitored on a real-time basis and the decision to remove forces would depend on the ground situation. There have been isolated protests, including last Friday when residents said some 8,000 people took to the streets and that the military used pellet-firing shotguns. The Indian government confirmed the clashes only several days later, blaming them on stone-throwing “miscreants” and saying its forces reacted with “restraint”.

Kashmiri politicians, alongside university professors, business leaders and activists, are among more than 500 people to have been taken into custody. Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since independence from Britain in 1947. It has been the spark for two wars and countless clashes between the two nuclear-armed arch-rivals, most recently in February when they conducted tit-for-tat air strikes.

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Officials in the part of Kashmir ruled by Pakistan said Thursday that three soldiers died in Indian shelling across the Line of Control, the de facto border, and two others were killed in a separate incident. The Pakistani military also said its return fire killed five Indian soldiers. But an Indian army spokesman told PTI late Thursday this was “fictitious”. Skirmishes are frequent across the so-called Line of Control (LoC), but the latest deaths came after Pakistan warned it was ready to meet any Indian aggression over Kashmir. – AFP

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