India PM holds first public event in Kashmir since clampdown

India PM holds first public event in Kashmir since clampdown

India PM holds first public event in Kashmir since clampdown

India PM holds first public event in Kashmir since clampdown

Advertisement

During his first public appearance in the disputed territory since India launched a broad security clampdown nearly three years ago, India’s prime minister promised peace and development for Jammu and Kashmir on Sunday.

Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist government has been working to put an end to a long-running insurgency in Indian-administered Kashmir and consolidate India’s control over the Muslim-majority area, which is also claimed by Pakistan.

India nullified the area’s limited autonomy in August 2019, when authorities arrested thousands and imposed the world’s longest internet shutdown, seeking to forestall local opposition to the move.

Tight security was in place for Modi’s appearance at Palli village in Jammu, the Hindu-majority southern part of the territory, which celebrated New Delhi’s introduction of direct rule as a defense against Kashmir’s separatist movement.

As he inaugurated new road and hydropower projects, Modi told the gathered crowd of thousands that his government had put the restive region on the path to prosperity.

Advertisement

“I want to tell the youth of the valley that they will not have to face the difficulties and travails that their parents and grandparents had to deal with,” Modi said.

Sunday’s event marked Panchayati Raj, a day that commemorates grassroots democracy — although Kashmir has been without an elected regional government since 2018.

Its last chief minister was detained during the clampdown and only released more than a year later.

Modi’s government has long said its decision to end Kashmir’s limited autonomy was aimed at fostering a lasting peace and bringing investment into the troubled region, where tens of thousands of people have been killed over the years.

Today, it is the most militarised part of India, with more than half a million soldiers and paramilitaries deployed across the fractious territory.

Police say violence has declined since Kashmir’s status was changed, but almost 1,000 people have been killed since 2019 — among them soldiers, militants and civilians.

Advertisement

Young men continue to join rebel groups that have fought Indian rule of Kashmir for more than three decades.

Militants threw grenades at a bus carrying security forces on Friday, killing an officer, in an incident around 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the venue of Modi’s public appearance.

In the following confrontation with government forces, two suspected insurgents were killed.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Read More News On

Catch all the International News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News


Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Follow us on Google News.


End of Article

Next Story