Kashmir police and militants killed in shootout in tourist area of Srinagar
A firefight near a 14th Century Muslim shrine killed at least four in the Kashmir capital Srinagar on Wednesday, October 17 and sparked protests in the city, police said.
While deadly violence has increased in recent months across the restive Indian-administered part of Kashmir – a territory also claimed by Pakistan – such shootouts are rare in Srinagar.
Police said three militants and a police officer were killed in the battle in streets near the Khanqah-e-Moula shrine, a tourist draw in Srinagar’s Old City.
The clash sparked a showdown between protesters and police, who fired tear gas at stone-throwing demonstrators shouting anti-India slogans. City shops and schools shut as news of the deaths spread.
Indian government forces cordoned off the Fateh Kadal locality, close to the shrine, after they received information about armed militants hiding in a house, a police statement said.
Witnesses said the gunfire broke out after soldiers knocked at the door of a house and took away a young man.
“We don’t know where he is and now we hear [police] say he was a militant,” the young man’s brother Asif Nabi told reporters outside his home, which was burned down in the violence.
As the firefight wound down, police officers turned on journalists reporting at the site of the encounter, injuring at least one reporter and two cameramen.
“They [police] just lunged at us and started beating us with sticks and then fired in the air. The empty cartridges hit my head,” Asif Qureshi, a journalist with an Indian news station, told AFP.
Earlier this month suspected rebels shot dead two activists from a pro-India political group near the scene of Wednesday’s shootout.
The capital has however largely been spared the violence which frequently breaks out between anti-India militants and government forces across Kashmir.
India has some 500,000 troops deployed in Kashmir, where separatist groups demand independence or a merger with Pakistan. Both New Delhi and Islamabad claim the whole of Kashmir.
Tens of thousands of people, mostly civilians, have died in the fighting.
Last week, Indian forces killed a 26-year-old Kashmir militant leader, Manan Wani, in a gunfight that lasted more than 10 hours. Wani quit a PhD program at Aligarh University in January to join Hizbul Mujahideen, the biggest group fighting for Kashmir’s merger with Pakistan.
This year, at least 184 militants, 75 security personnel and 60 civilians have been killed.
India accuses Pakistan of arming and training militants to attack Indian forces. Pakistan says it only provides diplomatic support for Kashmir’s right to self-determination.
Kashmir looks for peace as ceasefire violations increase on the India-Pakistan border
With reporting from AFP