Curfew in Indian-held Kashmir on eve of independence day

Published August 14, 2015
The restrictions are imposed to prevent miscreants from hoisting Pakistani flags, said DG Police K. Rajendra. —AFP
The restrictions are imposed to prevent miscreants from hoisting Pakistani flags, said DG Police K. Rajendra. —AFP

SRINAGAR: Authorities imposed a curfew in parts of the main city of Indian-controlled Kashmir on Friday to prevent any move by separatists to celebrate Pakistan's indepedence day, police said.

The restrictions in Srinagar, which included the closure of the city's main mosque during Friday prayers, were announced on the eve of independence day in both India and Pakistan and follow a recent spike in violence.

“The restrictions are imposed to prevent miscreants from hoisting Pakistani flags and to avoid loss of life,” director general of police, K. Rajendra, told AFP.

Forces from both sides of the Line of Control, Kashmir's de facto border, exchanged heavy fire and mortar shells in the southern Poonch sector early Friday, according to Indian defence ministry spokesman Manish Mehta.

Additional checkpoints and razor wire barricades have been erected along major arterial roads in Indian-controlled Kashmir to thwart militant attacks amid the deployment of thousands of troop reinforcements.

On Thursday a bomb kept in a steel pot exploded in the compound of a mosque in the south of the Kashmir Valley, injuring 10 worshipers as they were leaving after morning prayers.

While relations between the two nuclear-armed countries remain chilly, their respective national security advisers are scheduled to meet in the Indian capital New Delhi on August 23 as a confidence-building measure.

The anniversary of the partition of the sub-continent in 1947 is often a tense period in Kashmir, a picturesque Himalayan territory which has been divided between India and Pakistan since the end of British colonial rule.

Kashmir is India's only Muslim majority state and several rebel groups have spent decades fighting for independence or a merger with Pakistan. The conflict has left tens of thousands, mostly civilians, dead.

Opinion

Editorial

Reserved seats
Updated 15 May, 2024

Reserved seats

The ECP's decisions and actions clearly need to be reviewed in light of the country’s laws.
Secretive state
15 May, 2024

Secretive state

THERE is a fresh push by the state to stamp out all criticism by using the alibi of protecting national interests....
Plague of rape
15 May, 2024

Plague of rape

FLAWED narratives about women — from being weak and vulnerable to provocative and culpable — have led to...
Privatisation divide
Updated 14 May, 2024

Privatisation divide

How this disagreement within the government will sit with the IMF is anybody’s guess.
AJK protests
14 May, 2024

AJK protests

SINCE last week, Azad Jammu & Kashmir has been roiled by protests, fuelled principally by a disconnect between...
Guns and guards
14 May, 2024

Guns and guards

THERE are some flawed aspects to our society that we must start to fix at the grassroots level. One of these is the...