Indian troops shoot Kashmir protesters

Source Aljazeera.net

Indian security forces have killed 11 people in Indian-controlled Kashmir after opening fire on protesters in two demonstrations, police and medical officials have said. Two protesters were also killed in Jammu. The protests came as police and troops were deployed across the disputed region on Aug. 12 to enforce a curfew before the burial of Sheikh Abdul Aziz, an important separatist leader, killed in clashes with police a day earlier. Large numbers of police and federal paramilitary, carrying rifles and batons, patrolled the summer capital Srinagar and adjoining areas, including Abdul Aziz's hometown of Pampore. The deaths took place near Bandipora, a town about 65km north of Indian Kashmir's summer capital Srinagar, and Lasjan, on the city's outskirts, a doctor at the city's main hospital said. At least 80 others were wounded in various parts of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, including inside Srinagar, police, doctors and witnesses said. Srinagar's two main hospitals called in extra staff, and local television channels issued appeals for blood donors. Kuldeep Khuda, the state's police chief, appealed to people "to help us in restoring peace" for the funeral. "We have imposed a curfew to ensure the peaceful burial of Sheikh Aziz," he said. "We are trying to ascertain what forced security personnel to open fire." Abdul Aziz, a fighter turned moderate political leader, was allegedly killed by Indian security personnel while marching on Aug. 11 in a protest near the Line of Control, which divides the Indian and Pakistani parts of the divided region. Four other protesters were killed and more than 200 were injured in fierce clashes with police in the Kashmir valley. The protesters said they were demonstrating against road blocks erected by Hindus in Jammu that have prevented trucks from reaching the Kashmir valley, damaging trade and blocking access to vital goods. The deaths came as Indian security forces tried to prevent the Muslims from marching towards the de facto border with Pakistan. The marchers had reached a point just 40km from the heavily militarized border, despite repeated efforts by Indian police and paramilitary forces to stop them with tear gas, rubber bullets and warning shots. Abdul Aziz's body was kept overnight in Srinagar's Mughal-built Jamia Masjid, the biggest mosque in the region. Hundreds of mourners stayed with the body chanting, "We want freedom" and "Long live Sheikh Aziz." The mourners have said they would not bury Aziz until two separatist leaders -- Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Syed Ali Geelani -- were allowed to lead the funeral. The two men are under house arrest. Umar Farooq said: "This is the real face of Indian democracy." "For demanding lifting of an economic blockade we get bullets," he said, "while Hindu fanatics who are attacking Muslims in Jammu and setting their property on fire are allowed to do whatever they want." The latest tensions stem from an order by the Jammu and Kashmir government in June to donate land to a Hindu pilgrimage trust in the valley. The decision sparked a series of protests that left six people dead. The land transfer was then canceled, leading to riots in Jammu, where Hindus began blocking the only road access to the valley -- a move that has badly hit Muslim traders. The blockade has led to shortages of essentials, such as medicines, and prompted the protest march on Aug. 11 by about 100,000 Muslims to Pakistan so fruit growers and traders can sell their goods on the other side of the border. Kashmir has been hit by increased unrest in recent months, underscoring what locals say is resentment about the fact that the peace process between India and Pakistan, launched in 2004, has led to no progress on the issue that has caused two wars between the nuclear-armed neighbors.