Held Kashmir shuts down after killing of militants
HELD SRINAGAR: Held Kashmir largely shut down on Wednesday after separatists called a strike to protest the killing of three men whose bullet-riddled bodies were discovered in an orchard two days earlier.Police say the deceased were local militants who were killed due to rivalry between different rebel factions in the
By our correspondents
September 17, 2015
HELD SRINAGAR: Held Kashmir largely shut down on Wednesday after separatists called a strike to protest the killing of three men whose bullet-riddled bodies were discovered in an orchard two days earlier.
Police say the deceased were local militants who were killed due to rivalry between different rebel factions in the conflict-stricken region, but separatist leaders say they died in police custody.
Shops and schools were closed and university exams cancelled as workers went on strike on Wednesday, while hundreds of police and paramilitary troops patrolled the main city of Srinagar and other major towns.
Separatist leaders opposed to Indian rule were detained by the police or confined to their homes to prevent them from leading demonstrations.
“We are investigating the killings, but it seems these are a result of group rivalry among the militants,” K Rajendra, director general of police for Indian-administered Kashmir, told AFP.
On Monday villagers at Dangerpora, 35 kilometres (20 miles) north of Srinagar, discovered the bodies of the three men in their early twenties with multiple bullet wounds and apparent torture marks.
Police later identified them as local militants who had joined a splinter faction of Kashmir´s largest rebel group, Hizbul Mujahideen, months earlier — a claim denied by the group. “This outfit does not exist. The trio were active members of the Hizbul Mujahideen and were killed in custody,” the group´s top commander Syed Sallahudin said in a statement published in local newspapers on Tuesday.
Police say the deceased were local militants who were killed due to rivalry between different rebel factions in the conflict-stricken region, but separatist leaders say they died in police custody.
Shops and schools were closed and university exams cancelled as workers went on strike on Wednesday, while hundreds of police and paramilitary troops patrolled the main city of Srinagar and other major towns.
Separatist leaders opposed to Indian rule were detained by the police or confined to their homes to prevent them from leading demonstrations.
“We are investigating the killings, but it seems these are a result of group rivalry among the militants,” K Rajendra, director general of police for Indian-administered Kashmir, told AFP.
On Monday villagers at Dangerpora, 35 kilometres (20 miles) north of Srinagar, discovered the bodies of the three men in their early twenties with multiple bullet wounds and apparent torture marks.
Police later identified them as local militants who had joined a splinter faction of Kashmir´s largest rebel group, Hizbul Mujahideen, months earlier — a claim denied by the group. “This outfit does not exist. The trio were active members of the Hizbul Mujahideen and were killed in custody,” the group´s top commander Syed Sallahudin said in a statement published in local newspapers on Tuesday.
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