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At least 4,000 detained in occupied Kashmir since India took away autonomy: AFP

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">WATCH: Nisar Ahmad Mir said Indian policemen detained his minor son on Aug. 24 in Kashmir. Two days later, his son, Danish, still had not returned home.<br><br>Link to full video and story: <a href="https://t.co/tFXg3NtlnC">https://t.co/tFXg3NtlnC</a> <a href="https://t.co/H8R5rVfRdC">pic.twitter.com/H8R5rVfRdC</a></p>— Niha Masih (@NihaMasih) <a href="https://twitter.com/NihaMasih/status/1167625246746148865?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 31, 2019</a></blockquote>
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Union Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi told me "everything is normal in Kashmir", when countered, he stopped the interview and said "you're influenced by reports from Pakistan"<br><br>And I rest my case. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/KashmirAtDecisionPoint?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#KashmirAtDecisionPoint</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/KashmirProtests?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#KashmirProtests</a> <a href="https://t.co/QyowUXAYol">https://t.co/QyowUXAYol</a></p>— Tanushree Pandey (@TanushreePande) <a href="https://twitter.com/TanushreePande/status/1168139551644110848?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 1, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Official data reveals detention of thousands in occupied Kashmir crackdown

Authorities in Indian-occupied Kashmir have arrested nearly 4,000 people since the scrapping of its special status last month, government data shows, the most clear evidence yet of the scale of one of the region's biggest crackdowns.

Muslim-majority Kashmir has been in turmoil since India stripped the region of its special autonomy and statehood on August 5, leading to clashes between security forces and residents and inflaming tension with Pakistan.

India said the removal of the status that occupied Kashmir has held since independence from Britain in 1947 would help integrate it into the Indian economy, to the benefit of all.

In an attempt to stifle the protests that the reform sparked in the occupied region, India cut internet and mobile services and imposed curfew-like restrictions in many areas.

It has also arrested more than 3,800 people, according to a government report dated September 6 and seen by Reuters, though about 2,600 have since been released.

A spokeswoman for India's interior ministry did not respond to a request for comment. Neither did Jammu and Kashmir police.

It was not clear on what basis most of the people were being held but an Indian official said some were held under the Public Safety Act, a law in occupied Kashmir that allows for detention for up to two years without charge.

The data for the first time shows the extent of the detentions, as well as indicating who was picked up and where. More than 200 politicians, including two former chief ministers of the region were arrested, along with more than 100 leaders and activists from an umbrella organisation of political groups.

The bulk of those arrested — more than 3,000 — were listed as "stone pelters and other miscreants". On Sunday, 85 detainees were shifted to a prison in Agra in northern India, a police source said.

Rights group Amnesty International said the crackdown was "distinct and unprecedented" in the recent history of the region and the detentions had contributed to "widespread fear and alienation".

"The communication blackout, security clampdown and detention of the political leaders in the region has made it worse," said Aakar Patel, head of Amnesty International India.

'Right to life'
India says the detentions are necessary to maintain order and prevent violence, and points to the relatively limited number of casualties compared with previous bouts of unrest.

The government says only one person is confirmed to have died compared with dozens in 2016, when the killing of a Kashmiri fighter sparked widespread violence.

"The right to life is the most important human right," India's national security adviser Ajit Doval told reporters recently.

The report contains data from the 13 police districts that make up the Kashmir Valley, the most populous part of the Himalayan region where the main city of Srinagar is located.

The largest number of arrests have been in Srinagar, the data shows, at nearly 1,000. Earlier unrest often centred in rural areas.

Of the detained political leaders, more than 80 were from the People's Democratic Party, formerly in coalition in Jammu and Kashmir with the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party.

About 70 are from the National Conference, which has for years dominated politics in occupied Kashmir, and more than a dozen from India's main opposition Congress party.

Police also arrested more than 150 people accused of association with armed groups fighting Indian rule.

An Indian official said it was likely that more than 1,200 people were still held, including all the high-profile politicians and separatists mentioned in the report, while dozens more are being arrested every day.

In the 24 hours before the report was compiled, more than two dozen people were arrested, mainly on suspicion of throwing stones at troops, the data showed.

The data did not include those under informal house arrest, nor people detained in a round-up of separatists that began in February after the Pulwama attack, in which more than 40 Indian soldiers were killed.

Days before India's move to strip occupied Kashmir of special status, one prominent Kashmiri leader told Reuters that more than 250 people with links to the movement were already in detention.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1504813/o...on-of-thousands-in-occupied-kashmir-crackdown
 
The Kashmiris detained more than 700km away from home

India's federal government is believed to have detained thousands of people including activists, local politicians and businessmen in Indian-administered Kashmir since it stripped the region of its autonomy on 5 August. Many have even been moved to jails elsewhere in India. BBC Hindi's Vineet Khare visited one such prison in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

It was a hot and sultry Friday morning in Agra, a crowded and dusty city in Uttar Pradesh that is also home to the Taj Mahal.

The occasional breeze made the weather bearable - but not for the dozen men and women from the Kashmir valley, where the temperature is around 18C in September. In Agra, it touches 35C.

The Kashmiris sat in a large waiting hall outside the imposing gate of the Agra Central Jail, and patiently waited their turn for a brief reunion with jailed family members.

Before the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government announced its decision to scrap the special status that gave Kashmir its autonomy, it put the region under lockdown - mobile phone networks, landlines and the internet were cut off; and regional political leaders were placed under house arrest.

The Muslim-majority valley has also witnessed protests and security forces have often clashed with protesters. And thousands of activists and others are believed to have been picked up from their homes in the days that followed the surprise move.

Indian security forces have transferred several hundred detainees from Kashmir to jails in other parts of India, according to media reports. Officials told the BBC that more than 80 of them are being held in Agra.

Agra Central Jail was heavily guarded, hot and smelly. The stink from the toilets wafted into the hall where the families sat, making the wait harder.

"It's too hot. I would die here," says one of the waiting family members, smiling grimly as he wipes his sweaty face with his shirt. "Do not ask my name. We may get in trouble."

He is from Pulwama, a town that is 30km (18.6 miles) from Kashmir's capital, Srinagar. He was waiting to meet his brother, who he says was picked up by security forces on the night of 4 August.

"We were not told where he was taken," he says. "I don't know why he was picked up. He had nothing to do with stone-pelting. He was a driver."

He says he followed up with officials who told him that his brother had been taken to Srinagar. "After a lot of effort, we found out he had been brought here," he adds.

He arrived in Agra on 28 August only to find out that he needed a "verification letter" from local police in Kashmir, confirming his story. So he went back to Pulwama and returned to Agra with the letter.

"My brother is 28," he adds. "He's educated - he even has a Masters, but now all of that is useless because he is in jail."

Abdul Ghani's plight is similar. The daily wage worker made the journey by train and bus from the Kashmiri town of Kulgam to Agra to meet his son and nephew - he had been told that both of them were being held here.

"They were picked up at two in the morning as they were sleeping," he says. "No one told us why they were picked up. They never threw stones at the forces."

Mr Ghani was also worried as he was not carrying a "verification letter".

"I didn't know I had to carry the letter," he says.

He adds that he had already spent 10,000 rupees ($140; £112) travelling to Agra, and cannot afford another trip.

A few gruelling hours later, it was time to for them to go through the gate. Almost all of them had brought fresh apples, the region's most famous produce.

Mr Ghani's pleading paid off and he was allowed to go in. An hour later, he emerged smiling.

"He [my son] was worried. But I told him everything was fine at home," he says. "Thanks to Allah, I met him here. I will come back in a fortnight."

The waiting hall was nearly empty by the evening, when I noticed a woman and a man walking briskly to the prison gate.

They had flown from Srinagar to Delhi, and had hired a taxi to drive them to Agra.

They were allowed to meet their brother for 20 minutes after submitting a request to officials.

"They told us had we come earlier, we could have met him for 40 minutes," says Tarique Ahmed Dar, whose imprisoned brother has three children.

Meetings are allowed only on Tuesdays and Fridays, so if Mr Dar had missed this one, he would have had to wait another four days.

"I spoke to him. His wife, his three children and our parents miss him," Mr Dar adds. "It's tough for them. Now that I have seen him, I will tell them he is fine."

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-49713419
 
9-year-old out to buy bread beaten, locked up

Anine-year-old Srinagar boy was beaten till he bled and detained for two days in a police lock-up, the trauma turning him into a recluse, his grandparents said.

The Class IV student, who lost his mother aged five months and was abandoned by his father, was the youngest of the at least 144 minors detained during the two-month-old clampdown, according to an official list.

The juvenile justice committee of Jammu and Kashmir High Court prepared the list and submitted it to the Supreme Court last week in response to a petition from child rights activists.

In the report, the government claims that none of the minors was detained illegally and they were all lodged in observation homes.

According to the report, the nine-year-old was arrested on August 7, two days after the revocation of Jammu and Kashmir’s special status, and released the same day. But his family says he spent two days locked up at a police station.

The boy told The Telegraph he was thrashed before being taken to the police station, apparently after a clash between protesters and the forces.

“I started bleeding but they showed no mercy and took me to the police station,” he said.

“My grandmother had sent me to a baker to buy bread. I showed them the loaf and told them I had no parents. But they paid no heed and locked me up for two days.”

His grandmother said the boy now rarely stepped out, preferring the familiarity and safety of the four walls of his home. “He dreads moving out, fearing re-arrest.”

She added that she and her husband had visited the police station after learning about the boy’s detention. She could not recall the dates of detention or release.

“We lay outside the police station until 2.30 in the night and returned home when they did not release him,” she said.

The grandmother said she had raised the boy and his elder sister since their mother died.

“His father abandoned him and his sister to remarry. He has settled down with his new wife,” she said. The grandparents are poor and live with the two children in a house with a single room and a kitchen.

The grandfather said the police had initially asked the couple to present the boy before them every morning --- as is apparently the practice with many of the youths detained during the clampdown. This is allegedly done to deter them from stone-throwing.

“But we told them he was too young to face this, after which they asked us to bring 15 local people who would sign a bond (guaranteeing his good behaviour),” he said.

“We took 20 people to sign the bond. Since then we have not been harassed.”

The police’s reply, cited in the high court report, says that not a “single juvenile in conflict with the law has been illegally detained”.

It adds: “If at all the juvenile in conflict with the law has been in subject to custody, the same has been placed in observation home under the orders of respective Juvenile Justice Board.”

https://www.telegraphindia.com/indi...out-to-buy-bread-beaten-locked-up/cid/1710267
 
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