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Kashmir crisis: Clashes erupt after first civilian death confirmed

Abdullah719

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Firdous Ahmed with a picture of his son shortly after he was admitted to hospital on 6 August ( Samaan Lateef/ The Independent )

Clashes erupted in Kashmir on Wednesday after news broke that a student had succumbed to his injuries in what is the first confirmed civilian death since India’s decision to revoke the region’s special status.

Asrar Khan, 18, from Illah-i-Bagh locality in the capital city Srinagar, was shot in the head by security forces on 6 August, a day after New Delhi’s decision.

As the news of Khan’s death spread, youth took to streets in Srinagar and other parts of Kashmir, throwing stones at armed forces deployed by India to quell the protests.

Roads in Srinagar leading to Khan’s house have now been blocked with barbed wire and barricades.

“Restrictions have been reimposed in Srinagar as a precautionary measure to maintain law and order. So far no untoward incident has been reported,” a police official said.

Khan’s father Firdous Ahmed alleges that Indian forces targetted his son without provocation.

“He was playing cricket with his friends in the community park on the evening of 6 August, when the Indian forces targetted him with pellets,” Mr Ahmed told The Independent from his home, tears rolling down his face.

Hospital records and X-ray scans shared with The Independent reveal that multiple pellets had hit Khan’s skull and face, including his left eye.

Khan’s friend who witnessed the incident and took him to the Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (Skims) hospital said the student was bleeding profusely from his head and mouth after he was shot. He asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals.

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X-ray of Asrar Khan’s injuries (Samaan Lateef/ The Independent)

The director general of Indian police Munir Khan however denied the allegation that the youth was targetted by security forces and said he was “hit by a stone” thrown by demonstrators.

“This is the proof. (Indian forces) are calling this a stone, but these are pellets,” Mr Ahmed said, pointing towards the pellet-ridden face of Khan in a photo taken minutes after he was admitted to hospital on 6 August.

Narendra Modi, the prime minister of India, announced earlier this month the revocation of Article 370, the constitutional clause that allowed Kashmir to make its own laws and prevent outsiders settling, and designated Kashmir as Indian territory.

Kashmir has since been under lockdown and protests banned, with Indian security forces imposing curfews on residents.

Internet and communication networks have also remained shut in the disputed territory, impacting greatly on emergency services.

In the clashes that have ensued this month, India has maintained that forces have acted with “restraint” and that, until now, no civilians have been killed.

Families have, however, told The Independent that several civilians have been killed by the authorities, who have then instructed doctors to keep their deaths off official records.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...th-protests-india-modi-srinagar-a9091946.html
 
...and we are being told things are normal in IoK.
 
That director general of police seems to be the biggest ******* of the facist Modi. He said the boy was hit by a stone. How dumb or how big a liar can you be?
 
That director general of police seems to be the biggest ******* of the facist Modi. He said the boy was hit by a stone. How dumb or how big a liar can you be?

He knows that most will accept it as fact without question.
 
He knows that most will accept it as fact without question.

this is a nation that still believes Abhi shot down an f16 so theyll believe anything..
If Modi tells them the earth is flat and promotes it in their media half their population will believe it..
 
this is a nation that still believes Abhi shot down an f16 so theyll believe anything..
If Modi tells them the earth is flat and promotes it in their media half their population will believe it..

And the other half will keep repeating until you start to believe it.

We have few Indians on this forum who are very good at it.
[MENTION=76058]cricketjoshila[/MENTION] :)
 
Fresh death in custody reveals dark side of India's policing in Kashmir

The death of a young Kashmiri man occurred in police custody at a time when the government of India has imposed restrictions and a communication blackout in the region since August 5.
Handwara, Indian-administered Kashmir — At dawn on September 3, the Indian police raided the house of Zareena Begum in north Kashmir's Handwara district and arrested her 24-year-old son Riyaz Ahmad Thickrey, a daily wage labourer.

Begum, who's partially blind, couldn't fathom the arrest, which looked like a sudden abduction. Far away in the remote forests of Handwara, 96 km away from Srinagar city, Begum's mud hut is perched on a low-lying hill. For the next few hours, she roamed from terrain to terrain, calling her son's name, hoping that he may return soon.

Riyaz, according to a police spokesperson, was involved in "theft and a "timber-related issue," citing the violation of the forest act. As Kashmir is going through a communication blackout since August 5, the family could not immediately break the news of Riyaz's arrest to their relatives. After a few hours, with the sun up, his younger brother Shakeel Thickrey walked a couple of miles to inform his maternal uncle Jamal-ud-Din Shabangi about Riyaz's detention.

Shabangi advised him to “go to the police station and take a few clothes and a packet of cigarettes for Riyaz.”

A few hours later, Shakeel and Begum visited Riyaz in the lock-up. He told Begum that he could have won his freedom if the police booked him for violating the forest laws but sees himself imprisoned for a long haul since he has been "framed" in a militancy-related incident.

Unable to comprehend what her son had done — all she knew was that prior to his arrest someone had reported him to the police for felling one or two trees — she returned home along with her younger son Shakeel.

But on September 4 at midnight, the police picked up Riyaz's uncle Shabangi from his home. Once they reached the police station, Shabangi enquired about Riyaz.

“They said he [Riyaz] is in the toilet,” Shabangi told TRT World. The toilet, he said, was in front of the police lock-up.

As Shabangi opened the toilet door, he was startled to see Riyaz lying face down on the floor, completely motionless. The police told him that Riyaz had hung himself to death in the toilet and it was a case of suicide. Terrified at the sight, he looked for traces of blood and found none on the spot.

Although the police maintain that their "preliminary investigation" suggests that Riyaz committed suicide, the family cries foul, and counters the claim saying he's been murdered in police custody.

The police sent Riyaz's body for post-mortem. A court inquiry was initiated and on the morning of September 5, the body was returned to the family.

“We haven't received the report of his post-mortem yet," Shabangi told TRT World on September 6.

While bathing the corpse, the mournful relatives and neighbours examined it carefully.

Mohammad Ramzan Dhobi, 30, a baker from neighboring village Hiral, said, "It didn’t look like suicide because his skull was wounded and his nose also bled."

Seeing the wounds, the family's hunch that Riyaz was killed in police custody felt real. They refused to believe the police's version of events. Instead of burying the dead, they took the body to Qalamabad, where Riyaz was kept in detention, to protest and demand justice.

“If he really committed suicide, the police has to prove that and explain the circumstances,” said Dhobi. “Instead, they [the police] summoned some respected elderly people of this area for what looks like a cover-up.”

Dhobi said the protest was largely peaceful but some young protesters couldn't hold their anger and pelted the police with stones. In retaliation, the police hit them with batons and fired tear gas.

The police exerted more force using the infamous shotgun-pellets that have blinded and even killed many Kashmiris in the last five years.

Except for Shabangi, who sat next to the shrouded corpse, everyone else ran here and there to avoid teargas and pellet firing. But he soon blacked out.

“The last thing I remember is a policeman hitting my head with his baton,” said Shabangi. “I fell unconscious.”

Dhobi, the baker, said the police detained him for a few hours. "At least six people were injured in the incident," he said.

Dhobi feels that many village elders are slowly distancing themselves from the case after some of them were summoned by the police. Though he supports the idea of seeking justice through India's legal system and taking the police to court, he's aware of the harrowing journey — how such cases drag on in courts for years and barely make any difference.

Dhobi, the Thickrey family and others in the neighbourhood are aware that several previous probes into chilling human rights abuses have never translated into justice in Kashmir.

Last March, a 30-year-old school principal — Rizwan Asad Pandit from south Kashmir’s Pulwama district — was found dead in police custody. Pandit was also arrested from home in a police raid. In their defence, the police issued the following statement: “In pursuance of a militancy case investigation, one suspect Rizwan Pandit of Awantipora was in police custody. The said person died in police custody.”

A magisterial inquiry was ordered to investigate the death but there haven’t been any updates as yet. The initial findings in the case revealed that Rizwan died because of the “extravasation of blood” — caused by multiple internal injuries. This report affirmed people's doubts that it was a custodial killing. Rizwan’s students marched in south Kashmir with placards reading, “Justice For Rizwan Sir.”

The last three decades of the Kashmir conflict — rooted in the 1947 Partition of the sub-continent — are deeply stained with incidents of extrajudicial killings, detentions without trials, forced disappearances and staged encounters, in which unarmed civilians are killed and passed off as militants for awards and medals.

According to the region's prominent human rights organization, the Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS), most of the probes ordered to investigate 108 cases of human rights abuse since 2008 — including nine custodial killings — have failed to initiate even a single prosecution and the families still await justice.

https://www.trtworld.com/magazine/f...ark-side-of-india-s-policing-in-kashmir-29672
 
Not to sound unsympathetic, but custody deaths are a problem that has plagued India for decades across all states and hopefully get fixed as time goes by.

I am guessing Pakistani police must have an amazing human rights accord if I go by the outrage on this thread??
 
Not to sound unsympathetic, but custody deaths are a problem that has plagued India for decades across all states and hopefully get fixed as time goes by.

I am guessing Pakistani police must have an amazing human rights accord if I go by the outrage on this thread??

You are an apologist for state terrorism.

This isnt normal police custody, the people hate India and their soldiers. In return Indian cowardly soliders kill them and place them in unmarked graves.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/aug/21/kashmir-unmarked-graves-thousands-bodies
 
Medical report says Kashmir teen, a topper and Kohli fan, died of shell and pellet injuries

Srinagar: Seventeen-year-old Asrar Wani was an aspiring doctor, a class-topper and the ‘Virat Kohli’ of his neighbourhood. But last week, he died at the Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS) in Srinagar due to injuries suffered in a shell blast a month ago, according to the death certificate accessed by ThePrint.

Last week, Munir Khan, the additional director general of the Jammu and Kashmir Police, had said Asrar died of “not a shell but stone injury”. But the death certificate states the cause of death as “pellet injury with shell blast injury with severe traumatic brain injury (operated for L decompressive craniectomy)”.

Asked again about the cause of death, ADGP Khan said the medical opinion seems “ambiguous” and will be investigated.

“The initial admission card of Asrar mentions that it was a pellet/blast/shell injury. Now this death/cause of death certificate says it was death caused due to shell blast. One should understand that when a tear gas shell is lobbed, it bursts in the air and releases smoke. It is not a grenade that it will blast on someone’s head or can be targeted or aimed at someone,” Khan said.

“An investigation is being carried out into the death of this boy, and this report also will be looked into. The doctors will be called to clarify and give details of the injuries. There will be a proper questionnaire that will be given to them. Let us not jump to conclusions.”

ThePrint had first reported the case of Asrar on 14 August, based on conversations with attendants and nursing staff at the SKIMS.

Cousin’s eyewitness account

At around 5 pm on 6 August, Asrar was playing cricket at a ground next to his house in Ellahi Bagh near Soura. The ball crossed the boundary and Asrar reached the 90-foot road, where a CRPF convoy was crossing.

Asrar’s cousin Adil, who was playing with him at the time, alleged that since there were around 60-70 boys in the ground — some playing cricket, some busy with a game of carom — the force started making announcements that a curfew had been imposed and people should disperse.

He alleged that the CRPF then started shooting pellets at the youth and Asrar, who had gone to pick up the ball, got caught in the firing.

“He just went out to pick up the ball when the CRPF lobbed a tear gas shell and his eyes started to burn. He could not run and he sat there on the road. Then the force started shooting pellets and a series of them hit his face,” Adil said.

“I tried to lift him and drag him to a corner, but another shell came and hit his head. He started to bleed. We then rushed him to the hospital on a bike.”

Adil said Asrar had never been involved in any stone-pelting case. ThePrint verified this with the local police and found that Asrar had no record of stone pelting.

School topper, didn’t care about Article 370

Asrar had scored 9 point grade out of 10 (equivalent to 90 per cent) in his Class 10, with full 100 marks in both science and maths.

Holding out his marksheet, Asrar’s mother asked: “Does this look like the marksheet of a stone-pelter? He just concentrated on his studies, played cricket and Kashmiri music. He loved Indian cricketers, especially Virat Kohli. He had no business picking up a stone and did not care about any political development, including the lifting of Article 370.

“He was a meritorious student at Kashmir Harvard School. We could not afford the fees, but still managed somehow because we knew he would make a big name. But he was brutally murdered,” she added. “If they wanted to hit him with a pellet, they should have hit him in the leg. Why his face and head?”

Asrar’s 11-year-old brother butted into the conversation at this point. “He had Virat’s screensaver on his phone. Here, no one could say anything against Virat even after he lost the World Cup. He wanted to be like him, and was called ‘mohalle ka Virat’,” he said.

Asrar’s exploits in a school T20 match against DPS, Srinagar, were covered in newspapers. “I cannot forget my boy’s face pierced with pellets, his head bleeding after a shell hit him. And then the police are shameless to say he did not die of shells and pellets. Is this medical report also a lie?” said father Firdous Ahmad Khan.

“The force (CRPF) was on its way to its base, when it fired pellets to disperse the crowd in the ground. My innocent boy just got caught in that.”

A teacher who had taught Asrar since class 8 also vouched for his excellence. “He was extremely bright; a student who always aimed at scoring high. In his class 8 and 9 as well, he scored 90 per cent, which was the highest in the school,” the teacher said.

Spoke to uncle for an hour before slipping into coma

Irfan Khan, Asrar’s uncle who rushed him to hospital after he was hit, said he was in his senses even an hour after sustaining the injuries.

“I asked him why he did not run and hide his face when the force lobbed tear gas shells and pellets. He said he couldn’t see anything as his eyes started to burn and he sat on the ground feeling helpless,” the uncle said.

“Will a stone-pelter not know how to react at a time like this? Will a stone-pelter sit on the ground to be hit by pellets?”

Khan said Asrar did not realise where the pellets came from. “He was bleeding profusely, but he asked me if his face was OK. He could feel the pellets on his face,” he said. “I told him he will be fine and that his face was fine and there was nothing to worry.”

Showing Asrar’s CT scan report, Khan said he had sustained a pellet injury in his brain, which led to a clot, and the doctors told him that he will have to be operated upon.

“After he was admitted, the doctors first put him on glucose, and then did his tests, including a CT scan. The scan showed a pellet in a section of his brain and they said it will have to be operated upon. One surgery was conducted and then he was put on a ventilator,” Khan said.

‘Held my hand, bit his tongue’

Last Monday, Asrar’s condition started deteriorating. The doctors called his father and uncle and told them he will have to be operated upon again.

“On Monday, the doctor told us that due to the pellet in his brain, there was water accumulating, and he was not in his senses because of that water,” Khan said.

According to Khan, the doctors scheduled a surgery for 4 pm that day and also allowed him inside the operation theatre.

“As the doctors were preparing for the operation, Asrar’s pulse dipped and they all panicked. The doctor said that his heart beat has slipped. They then gave him two shocks and revived his heart beat,” Khan said.

Due to this complication, the doctors then decided to wait for Asrar’s condition to get stable.

“He was brought back from the operation theatre as his condition was not stable for a surgery. The doctor told me that I should hold his hand tightly and sit beside him,” Khan said.

“Only some time had passed that Asrar tightened his grip on my hand. I thought he is becoming conscious but what I witnessed next, I will never forget. Asrar held my hand tight. His eyes were closed. He bit his tongue hard between his teeth and then his grip loosened. He passed away.”

https://theprint.in/india/medical-r...fan-died-of-shell-and-pellet-injuries/289765/
 
Now you tell me will his family have love for india and india army?

India has already lost kashmir but they havent realised.
 
MOURNING AND RESISTANCE IN KASHMIR AFTER INDIA REVOKED THE STATE’S SPECIAL STATUS

SRINAGAR, JAMMU AND KASHMIR — On the eve of Eid al-Adha last month, 17-year-old Asrar Khan lay in a vegetative state at Sher-i-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, a hospital in downtown Srinagar, Kashmir’s largest city. The unconscious teenager was barely hanging on to life, connected to a ventilator and blinded in one eye — the result, his family says, of pellet injuries at the hands of India’s armed forces.

Six days earlier, on August 5, India’s government, led by the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the helm, had unilaterally abrogated a constitutional provision that gave special rights and a degree of autonomy to Kashmir, one of the country’s only Muslim-majority regions. Kashmir, already one of the most militarized places on earth, has been under near-total lockdown since then, with a communications blackout, mass arrests, and an intensified military presence.

After arriving in Srinagar on August 11, I made it to the hospital by passing through nine checkpoints manned by paramilitary forces, which I navigated with the help of a local reporter. The next morning, on the first day of Eid, I visited Khan’s mother, Shaheena, at her family’s home in the Ilahibad neighborhood of Srinagar, where she lives with her husband and Khan’s two siblings. With her son in the hospital, there was no qurbani — the ritual sacrifice that is the focus of the four-day Muslim festival. Instead, there was a palpable sense of doom.

She stared at me for some time, as though she were vetting me, before breaking her silence with an air of defiance. “I challenge Modi to give my son’s eye back. Modi’s government is the killer of small children. He keeps saying all is calm in Kashmir. Is this calm?”

Shaheena, who is 37 years old, told me that on the evening of August 6, she had warned her son not to go out to play carrom — a board game — with his friends. “Am I a stone pelter?” Khan responded, ignoring his mom’s advice and noting that he would not be joining the Kashmiris in the streets who were fighting back against the Indian forces. “Nothing would happen to me, I am a studious kid.”

Shortly after sunset, a cavalcade of army vehicles withdrawing from daytime deployment passed through the neighborhood, launching tear gas and firing pellet guns, three eyewitnesses told me in interviews. His friends and family members described Khan, who attended the well-known Kashmir Harvard School, as an excellent student and cricketer. “He didn’t want to play state level, but international-level cricket,” said Khan’s childhood friend and next-door neighbor, who asked for anonymity out of fear of retribution. “Asrar told me, ‘One day, I will definitely play international cricket [for India].’”

Khan’s father, Firdous Ahmad Khan, told me that his son’s education had been of paramount importance. “The gun is not going to give us our sustenance, education will,” he said. “We need our boys to eat, study, move ahead. All we want is peace.”

A review of Asrar Khan’s medical records, shared with me by his family, revealed extensive pellet injuries to his head and eye. His doctors told me that he had suffered severe brain hemorrhage, but that he was likely to survive.

On September 4, a few days before his 18th birthday, Khan succumbed to his wounds, becoming the first confirmed civilian death in Kashmir Valley caused by security action during the current period of unrest, according to the New York Times. The authorities have denied culpability, claiming that Khan was part of an unruly mob engaged in stone pelting and was responsible for his own death. “There is not a single death in security forces action since August 5,” Munir Khan, a police official in the state of Jammu and Kashmir, told reporters. Eyewitnesses, however, reject that account. “There was no stone pelting happening that day,” Asrar Khan’s friend said. “It was just so sudden and inexplicable.”

KASHMIR ACCEDED TO INDIA after the violent British partition of the subcontinent in 1947, but the region is hotly contested by Pakistan, which also administers part of the territory. Years of confrontation, repression, and support from Pakistan led to the outbreak of an armed Kashmiri separatist movement in the late 1980s. Modi has taken a hard-line nationalist approach to Kashmir since he entered office in 2014. His party, the BJP, has floated the revocation of Articles 370 and 35A of India’s constitution — which gave Kashmir its special status and barred Indians from outside the state to settle there — for more than five years, and made it a reality just months after the prime minister’s May re-election.

In early August, thousands of soldiers and paramilitary forces were deployed to Jammu and Kashmir, which already had an estimate security force presence of 600,000 amid a population of about 13 million. After Khan’s death, all roads leading to his family’s house in Ilahibad were blockaded with barbed wire and barricades, according to news reports and eyewitnesses.

Even so, clashes erupted across Srinagar where youngsters took to the streets to pelt stones at the forces. More than 1,000 locals defied the curfew and descended on the playground that was the site of Khan’s martyrdom, or shahadat, for the funeral, eyewitnesses told me. The protests reverberated with the now-famous Kashmiri chant: “There is only one solution. Gun solution, gun solution.”

The Indian government’s repeated assertions of calm and peace in the Valley, and subsequent dismissal of these protests, seems to be adding fuel to the collective anger. Portions of the present lockdown in Kashmir are reminiscent of the violence that gripped the region in 2016, after Burhan Wani, a 22-year-old militant was gunned down by Indian security forces. The killing of Wani, who had gained cult status after promoting his separatist ideology through social media, led to months of protests, during which at least 92 people were killed, according to a conservative estimate.

“Extra troops are now deployed with three times the ammunition used in 2016,” a Kashmiri journalist told me before Khan’s death, noting that the local population would resist the state’s use of force. He predicted that the province was one major event away from mass statewide protests. “There needs to be something very little, not even as big as Burhan Wani. Explosives have been laid all around Kashmir — now it needs the smallest of sparks, and it will burst.”

IN THE SRINAGAR district of Soura, I witnessed Kashmiris adopting guerrilla methods of organizing, building makeshift fortresses to keep security forces out. It started on August 9, where an estimated 10,000 people had gathered at a large mosque, known as Jenab Sahib, in Soura to protest the revocation of Article 370, prompting a violent crackdown by the security forces who used tear gas and pellets to quell the resistance. Later, New Delhi claimed that the protest was not attended by more than 20 people, calling the detailed reports of some international media outlets “fabricated.”

In the days following the protest, security forces arrested dozens of young boys in nighttime raids, according to local residents. They responded by converting Soura into a fortress, blockading all entry and exit points with huge boulders, erecting tin walls, and digging deep ditches into the roads to block the forces from getting through in their vehicles. Young boys in groups of 20, armed with sticks and stones, stood guard at the various entry points all night.

I tried entering Soura with a group of reporters on August 11. When we reached the fourth and final checkpoint, we told the special counterinsurgency officer on patrol that we were journalists from New Delhi. In what appeared to be an attempt to silence the rest of us, the officer beat the Kashmiri journalist among us with a fiberglass rod and then turned us away. “I told you they’re going to go violent now,” the journalist, Jaris Zargar, told me when we re-entered the car. “I don’t know how I managed to keep my calm.”

On August 16, a day after India’s Independence Day, I watched as an estimated 4,000 protesters — men, women, and children — gathered at Jenab Sahib, which has become the epicenter of resistance in Srinagar. They carried signs that read: “GO INDIA GO BACK,” “BBC, Al Jazeera THANK YOU,” (for showing the protests), and “TERRORIST MODI.” Some protesters pelted stones at government drones that were flying overhead, and a teenage girl chanted, “We are not scared, and you should not be either.”

“We have dug holes into the roads, to protect our women and children and ourselves. It starts at 10 p.m. every night. Now all the roads to Soura are closed,” said Mohammad Yusuf Kandu, 38, who weaves pashmina scarves for a living. “If the army tries to enter here by force, there will be a lot of bloodshed.”

Kandu had sustained pellet injuries to both his hands and feet as he tried to assist other victims during the Soura protests. Indian forces have been using pellet guns to quell resistance since a wave of protests in 2010. These guns have become a source of terror for the area’s residents. “People are willing to have a bullet in their body, but not pellets — pellets usually damage your eyes,” said Zohaib Butt, a Kashmiri photojournalist who was blinded in one eye with pellets while covering the 2016 protests in Srinagar.

Last month, Butt picked up his camera for the first time since the incident. As he walked into Soura under siege, he looked at me with faint pride and said, “I have a connection of suffering with these people — it is like they’re talking to a stakeholder. Just like them, I’ve given my eye to the Valley.”

Forty days after Modi revoked Kashmir’s autonomous status, Butt, Asrar Khan’s family, and the roughly 13 million people of Kashmir remain under lockdown — largely unable to communicate with the outside world.

https://theintercept.com/2019/09/14/kashmir-india-article-370/
 
All the misery and suffering is solely on the blood-stained hands of Modi and his supporters.

This is what the Indian populace voted for.

They forgot what Kabir wrote many years ago -Boye ped babul ka, so amua kaha se paaye.
 
Kashmir Boy Dies By Suicide After Allegedly Being Beaten by Soldiers

Srinagar: A teenage boy from Pulwama in south Kashmir died by suicide after he was allegedly beaten by soldiers at a nearby Army camp, his family members told reporters.

Traumatised by his experience after he was “detained and beaten” by the army during the day, said family members, Yawar Ahmad Bhat, 15, of Chandigam village consumed poison late on September 17.

They said there had been a grenade attack on an Army camp in nearby Tahab village a day before the tragic incident.

“(Yawar) was picked up by the forces from the same camp on Tuesday. They had also snatched his I-card before releasing him hours later,” his sister, Saima, told reporters here. “The same evening (Tuesday) he confided to me that ‘I was beaten up by the Army’. But he didn’t speak about the incident to our parents or any other family member.”

She said her brother, a class 10 student, was “very upset” about what had happened.

“He consumed poison late Tuesday night,” said Saima. “We rushed him to hospital, where doctors performed his stomach wash (gastric lavage). However, his condition deteriorated,” said a cousin of the deceased boy.

Yawar was later referred to Srinagar’s Shri Maharaja Hari Singh (SMHS) hospital, where he remained for two days. He died at the hospital on the evening of September 19.

The youngest of seven siblings, including five sisters, Yawar was “very weak” and had never been detained by the police or any other security agency in the past, said his father Abdul Hameed, a farmer.

Yawar, who also worked at a local car service station, was on way to Pulwama when he was picked up by the Army.

The senior superintendent of police, Pulwama, Chandan Kohli, said the police have started inquest proceedings in the case under section 174 of the CrPc.

“It is a suicide case,” he said, adding that the police took up the matter with the army but they “denied any such incident”.

Yawar’s cousin said that when he was being rushed to hospital, he repeatedly said that “Kashmiris are being subjected to zulm (oppression).”

A senior official from the district administration, who asked not to be named, said the police intended to probe the allegations that the young boy was beaten by the army.

“Other aspects of the case are also matter of investigation,” said the official.

An army spokesman however termed the allegations by Yawar’s family as “baseless”. “The army neither detained nor tortured him,” said an army spokesperson.

https://thewire.in/rights/kashmir-boy-dies-by-suicide-after-allegedly-being-beaten-by-soldiers
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">What's astonishing about the police report—apart from the baldfaced lie about 17-year-old Altaf still being alive—is that many kids arrested in Kashmir were taken in on "preventive" grounds. This means they weren't actually doing anything, yet got dragged to a police station. <a href="https://t.co/jLiqmgBDXG">https://t.co/jLiqmgBDXG</a></p>— Siddharth (@svaradarajan) <a href="https://twitter.com/svaradarajan/status/1180094683038371842?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 4, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Just yesterday, the Kashmiri diaspora were sharing the news that a 63 year old man was arrested because he had had fundamentalist thoughts since childhood.

Positively Orwellian.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">What's astonishing about the police report—apart from the baldfaced lie about 17-year-old Altaf still being alive—is that many kids arrested in Kashmir were taken in on "preventive" grounds. This means they weren't actually doing anything, yet got dragged to a police station. <a href="https://t.co/jLiqmgBDXG">https://t.co/jLiqmgBDXG</a></p>— Siddharth (@svaradarajan) <a href="https://twitter.com/svaradarajan/status/1180094683038371842?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 4, 2019</a></blockquote>
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Disgusting arresting children.

I pray they aren't being toruted or sexually molested. :(
 
About time for India to revoke the curfiew. If there is a real Aazadi jazba, people wouldn't sit in their homes playing chess for 60 days. Let the people out and let them protest peacefully, if any. People will eventually start caring about their own lives in a week or two.
 
I'm aware the Pakistani propaganda has slowed down as well. It's time for Imran and others to calm down as well, thereby facilitating the ease of restrictions. There is this unnecessary paranoia being created about genocide and other crap which will only rile up fringe elements. Let the Kashmiris live. India and Pakistan should make these changes soon
 
About time for India to revoke the curfiew. If there is a real Aazadi jazba, people wouldn't sit in their homes playing chess for 60 days. Let the people out and let them protest peacefully, if any. People will eventually start caring about their own lives in a week or two.

Most of the community leaders and activists are locked up. These are the people who organize protests and rally up the community. How difficult is it to understand this concept?

Regardless, new leaders will emerge, and they will have more hate for India than ever before. Modi and the BJP have put themselves in a corner.
 
I'm aware the Pakistani propaganda has slowed down as well. It's time for Imran and others to calm down as well, thereby facilitating the ease of restrictions. There is this unnecessary paranoia being created about genocide and other crap which will only rile up fringe elements. Let the Kashmiris live. India and Pakistan should make these changes soon

lol. The continuing inhumane curfew is now the fault of Pakistan. Do youi know who idiotic this sounds? No you dont. :sachin
 
I'm aware the Pakistani propaganda has slowed down as well. It's time for Imran and others to calm down as well, thereby facilitating the ease of restrictions. There is this unnecessary paranoia being created about genocide and other crap which will only rile up fringe elements. Let the Kashmiris live. India and Pakistan should make these changes soon

Are Kashmiri not locked up, Indian army has stopped using violence against Kashmiri? Aren't and haven't Indian Army raped Kashmiri females? Haven't and continue to make them blind with pellet gusn? If none of these or more are true then you can label that as propaganda but as an Indian who justify rise in fascism and bigotry against minority would have a hard time to see the facts that going against their beliefs.
 
Most of the community leaders and activists are locked up. These are the people who organize protests and rally up the community. How difficult is it to understand this concept?

Regardless, new leaders will emerge, and they will have more hate for India than ever before. Modi and the BJP have put themselves in a corner.

All.of this is speculation like "genocide" talk. So people don't know they want Azadi if there is no community leader around? It proves my point that they don't care about it much then.
 
lol. The continuing inhumane curfew is now the fault of Pakistan. Do youi know who idiotic this sounds? No you dont. :sachin

I'm saying it's idiotic to ask Kashmiris to pick up gun and fight when they are already jailed in their homes. Why will the restrictions ease if there is rampant speculation? Use common sense. It's up to the leaders to tone down the doomsday rhetoric and only then will the restrictions ease. How hard is this to understand? These are millions of people sitting at home watching TV and wasting time. If they are ready to die for Azadi, they would be in the streets by now, curfew be damned.
 
Are Kashmiri not locked up, Indian army has stopped using violence against Kashmiri? Aren't and haven't Indian Army raped Kashmiri females? Haven't and continue to make them blind with pellet gusn? If none of these or more are true then you can label that as propaganda but as an Indian who justify rise in fascism and bigotry against minority would have a hard time to see the facts that going against their beliefs.

You should read the posts carefully. I'm asking the restrictions to ease first. I want people sitting in their homes to have a choice to go about their business or to protest peacefully. All of this is not possible because of a fake rhetoric of genocide. Do you see a Bhagat Singh, which many Pakistanis use liberally as an example, sitting tight for 60 days in a curfew? Tone the azadi talk down as Kashmiris don't seem to care beyond a certain point. People don't follow rules if there is a rebellion. Infact the definition of rebellion is not following the rules. Here, millions of people are sitting at homes doing nothing.
 
You should read the posts carefully. I'm asking the restrictions to ease first. I want people sitting in their homes to have a choice to go about their business or to protest peacefully. All of this is not possible because of a fake rhetoric of genocide. Do you see a Bhagat Singh, which many Pakistanis use liberally as an example, sitting tight for 60 days in a curfew? Tone the azadi talk down as Kashmiris don't seem to care beyond a certain point. People don't follow rules if there is a rebellion. Infact the definition of rebellion is not following the rules. Here, millions of people are sitting at homes doing nothing.

Like I have said, nothing but justification.

Be subservient or we will kill you, rape you, or blind you.
 
All.of this is speculation like "genocide" talk. So people don't know they want Azadi if there is no community leader around? It proves my point that they don't care about it much then.

It is quite sad to see people such as you deliberately lower their IQ in order to comply with their fascist government's policies.

You speak of a democracy, then proceed to lock up the community and political leaders of region. Then you ask why aren't people protesting during a curfew with military everywhere? Read some history books - all revolutions are sparked and organized by leaders of the community. Not every individual is a leader, even though they may have these feelings of loathe for India, they are not sure what actions to take. Especially given the fact that there is 1 soldier roaming around for every 8 citizens. Its not something thats just going to disappear though, no matter how hard some people dumb themselves down in order to believe so.
 
I'm saying it's idiotic to ask Kashmiris to pick up gun and fight when they are already jailed in their homes. Why will the restrictions ease if there is rampant speculation? Use common sense. It's up to the leaders to tone down the doomsday rhetoric and only then will the restrictions ease. How hard is this to understand? These are millions of people sitting at home watching TV and wasting time. If they are ready to die for Azadi, they would be in the streets by now, curfew be damned.

This is your foolish understanding.

However I would do that without thinking. Now way would I allow scm Indian terrorist soldiers to hold a gun to me or my family. I'd rather die and take a few of them with me.
 
If only by some natural law of fairness - every time they kill an innocent Muslim Kashmiri, an innocent Indian dies in central India.

Only then will they feel the pain the Kashmiris feel.
 
I'm aware the Pakistani propaganda has slowed down as well. It's time for Imran and others to calm down as well, thereby facilitating the ease of restrictions. There is this unnecessary paranoia being created about genocide and other crap which will only rile up fringe elements. Let the Kashmiris live. India and Pakistan should make these changes soon

I'm actually quite surprised by the intellect in your post and your ability to conveniently ignore basic realities.

Is it implied from your post that the curfew is simply being extended because Pakistan is internationalizing the issue? So you are not condemning the underlying curfew itself here but are annoyed on the fact that it has to be extended due to Pakistan being very vocal. This is next level stuff.
 
India needs to come up with a new approach to this as the current situation with curfews and the heavy military presence is clearly not working.

They need to calm the situation down by stopping the curfews, removing the heavy military presence, show more tolerance and patience towards the Kashmiris, start formal dialogue and alleviate their fears. Everyone will eventually calm down if India takes the right steps. This has been handled terribly right from the beginning.
 
I'm actually quite surprised by the intellect in your post and your ability to conveniently ignore basic realities.

Is it implied from your post that the curfew is simply being extended because Pakistan is internationalizing the issue? So you are not condemning the underlying curfew itself here but are annoyed on the fact that it has to be extended due to Pakistan being very vocal. This is next level stuff.

The basic reality is there is no curfew in Jammu and there is a curfew in Kashmir. The basic reality is people.are sitting tight in their homes following all the rules. Indian government is unnecessarily extending the curfew. They should lift it ASAP and let people live their lives or protest peacefully. The radicals are already in jails. Let the millions of other innocent citizens live freely. 60 days is enough to get hold of violent agitators and on all accounts they are already in jail. Pakistan should also stop the genocide talk and stop the propaganda of Jihad. Once the rhetoric dies down, things will get easier for everybody. Kashmir banega Pakistan and Azadi talks are just pipe dreams. The Kashmir that Pak owns hasn't banaa Pakistan yet. Why will Indian Kashmir become Pakistan. All this stupid rhetoric is causing unnecessary pipe dreams and frustration among people. Let them live in peace like the rest of India.
 
This is your foolish understanding.

However I would do that without thinking. Now way would I allow scm Indian terrorist soldiers to hold a gun to me or my family. I'd rather die and take a few of them with me.

Yes it's easy to say sitting in the comforts of AC rooms. Reality is different. They are all chilling out spending time with families playing board games at home. People need to work. They need to study and be productive. Every story of a pellet injured person is someone who peaked out of a window at an inopportune time or is apparently someone who was just there by chance. Who is pelting all those stones then? See, these stories, true or false don't matter. Nobody is actually caring. People should use common sense and start living their lives. They've been living as Indians all their lives working for Indian companies and carrying Indian passports. Nobody is special and definitely not the Kashmiris.They ain't a super productive HongKong. They need to realize the reality and see how they can improve their lives. Common sense is the need of the hour.
 
It is quite sad to see people such as you deliberately lower their IQ in order to comply with their fascist government's policies.

You speak of a democracy, then proceed to lock up the community and political leaders of region. Then you ask why aren't people protesting during a curfew with military everywhere? Read some history books - all revolutions are sparked and organized by leaders of the community. Not every individual is a leader, even though they may have these feelings of loathe for India, they are not sure what actions to take. Especially given the fact that there is 1 soldier roaming around for every 8 citizens. Its not something thats just going to disappear though, no matter how hard some people dumb themselves down in order to believe so.

When Mandela was in jail for decades did the black south Africans stop their agitation? Stop hyping the azadi beat and don't let your wishful thinking cloud your common sense. Which revolution in history had millions of people following orders for.months? As I said, drumming up the rhetoric doesn't change the reality and that's why I think India should start removing the restrictions soon.
 
When Mandela was in jail for decades did the black south Africans stop their agitation? Stop hyping the azadi beat and don't let your wishful thinking cloud your common sense. Which revolution in history had millions of people following orders for.months? As I said, drumming up the rhetoric doesn't change the reality and that's why I think India should start removing the restrictions soon.

What about the human rights violations being committed by the military? You make all these claims but conveniently ignore the fact the military is committing human rights violations. No journalists are allowed to monitor anything. This guy is paining the curfew like it's no big deal but the reality is something else.
 
What about the human rights violations being committed by the military? You make all these claims but conveniently ignore the fact the military is committing human rights violations. No journalists are allowed to monitor anything. This guy is paining the curfew like it's no big deal but the reality is something else.

They wont allow foreign journalist and observers into kashmir, that is telling.

Indians defending this is shameful.
 
What about the human rights violations being committed by the military? You make all these claims but conveniently ignore the fact the military is committing human rights violations. No journalists are allowed to monitor anything. This guy is paining the curfew like it's no big deal but the reality is something else.

Precisely why the curfew should be lifted. There is a lot of news, part of which is speculation. Nobody knows the true story. Lifting the curfew would help understand the ground reality. Army isn't going anywhere, they can always impose a curfew again, stone pelters will meet their eventual fate and terrorists will be found in a ditch. Army atrocities will come out as well. There is no point in this curfew anymore. Any violent reaction from Kashmiris will actually help GOI. This status quo helps no one.
 
After "No Mistakes" Message To Army, Minister Meets Injured J&K Civilians

Defence Minister Rajnath Singh - in Jammu and Kashmir Wednesday to firefight protests over the death of three civilians after they were detained by the Army for questioning - also met others allegedly injured while in military custody. Eight civilians were detained after an ambush on two Army vehicles in J&K's Poonch district, in which four soldiers were killed.

However, after a video showing troops beating and torturing civilians went viral, their families and some political parties alleged custodial torture. Around a dozen villagers were shifted to hospitals. The authenticity of the video, however, has not been established.

Responsibility for the Poonch terror attack was claimed by the People's Anti-Fascist Front, which is linked to the Jaish-e-
Mohammed terrorist outfit and was first seen in 2019, after the government scrapped special status for Jammu and Kashmir.

The Defence Minister's vist - his second in the last seven months - followed that of Chief of Army Staff General Manoj Pande, who was in the union territory on Monday to review the in-progress anti-terror op in Surankote and Rajouri district's Thanamandi forest belt.

The Pir Panjal region - Rajouri and Poonch districts - had been free from terrorism since 2003 but major attacks have resume since October 2021. In the last seven months alone, 20 soldiers, including officers and special forces commandos, have been killed.

Source : NDTV
 
Farooq Abdullah for impartial probe into killing, torturing of civilians

National Conference President Farooq Abdullah has reiterated the demand for an impartial probe into the killing and torturing of civilians by Indian troops at an army camp in the Surankote area of Poonch district in illegally occupied Jammu and Kashmir.

According to Kashmir Media Service, the Indian Army had picked up several civilians after the killing of five troops in an attack in the area on December 21. The army killed three of them in custody and injured others by subjecting them to severe torture. A video that went viral on social media showed the Indian troops brutally beating the civilians and pouring chili powder on their wounds.

Farooq Abdullah visited the government hospital in Rajouri and met the injured civilians. Consoling the victims’ families, he strongly condemned the incident and said that there was no place for such incidents in any society. He also reiterated the demand for an impartial and time-bound judicial probe into the incident.


Later, talking to reporters, he maintained that dialogue between India and Pakistan is the only way to resolve the Kashmir dispute. Farooq Abdullah also charged the Narendra Modi-led Indian government with causing discrimination against the minority communities in India. Such a stance by the BJP government will only weaken India, he added.

Source : Daily times
 
Nine pilgrims were killed and 33 injured after terrorists fired on a bus carrying pilgrims in Jammu and Kashmir’s Reasi, which resulted in the vehicle plunging into a gorge.

“We received reports that militants were lying in wait, and they fired on the bus, which had left Shivpuri and was on its way to Katra. As a result, the driver lost control and the bus fell into a gorge. Rescue operation has been completed – nine people are dead, and the 33 injured have been hospitalised. The people (in the bus) are not locals, but their identities are yet to be confirmed. So far, we’ve learnt that they may be from Uttar Pradesh,” the Reasi Senior Superintendent of Police, Mohita Sharma, said.

Asked if there were inputs about militant activity in the area, she said, “Whenever there’s an incident of militancy, we are on high alert… The Shivpuri shrine had been secured, and in adjoining areas too, we had been conducting area domination activities.”


 
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