Kashmir tensions intensify amid India-Pakistan skirmishes
Tensions have soared along the volatile, highly
militarized frontier between India and Pakistan in the disputed Himalayan
region of Kashmir, as India deployed more troops and ordered thousands of
visitors out of the region.
Indian firing Sunday along the Line of Control that
separates Kashmir between the rivals wounded a woman as the ongoing skirmishes
spread fear in border villages, Pakistani police said. The frontier residents
on the Pakistani side are either moving out to safer places or have begun
construction of new bunkers, with some strengthening existing shelters near their
homes.
Pakistan and India, who both claim Kashmir in its
entirety, routinely blame each other for initiating border skirmishes, but the
latest ones come amid the Indian government’s evacuation order of tourists and
Hindu pilgrims and a troop buildup in its part of the region.
The measures have sparked fears in Kashmir that New
Delhi is planning to scrap an Indian constitutional provision that forbids
Indians from outside the region from buying land in the Muslim-majority
territory. In recent days, Hindu-majority India has deployed at least 10,000
troops in Kashmir, with media reports of a further 25,000 ordered to one of the
world’s most militarized regions.
Mohammad Fareed, a retired government employee in
Tufrabad village near the Line of Control, said he had spent over $3,000 to
construct a concrete bunker for his family of 10. “It looks like the situation
is getting bad,” he said, adding that the recent shelling and the dropping of
cluster bombs had created massive fear.
“People are using their savings to build bunkers.
After all, if you live you will do other things,” said Fareed.
Mohammad Altaf, a trader dealing in construction
material, confirmed that people were buying concrete blocks and crushed stone
to construct bunkers in and around their homes.
But Mohammad Nasim opted to shift his family from
Chakoti village to a safer place. “God knows what will happen the next day so
it’s not wise to make a bunker. Instead I am moving away from the border area,”
he said.
Raja Farooq Haider, the prime minister of
Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, announced Friday the sanctioning of about $19
million for community bunkers for residents living along the border.
Kashmir has grabbed the spotlight in recent days,
months after a deadly militant attack on an Indian paramilitary convoy sparked
cross-border air attacks and brought India and Pakistan to the brink of war.
The recent escalation has come amid offers by President Donald Trump to mediate
to resolve the Kashmir issue. While Pakistan welcomed the offer, India rejected
it, saying the dispute was between the two countries.
Amid the evacuation order, hundreds of Indian and
foreign visitors, including some Hindu pilgrims, continued congregating outside
the main terminal at the airport in Srinagar, the region’s main city, seeking
seats on flights out.
The Indian air force flew 326 tourists out of
Srinagar, the Press Trust of India news agency reported. Out of 11,301
tourists, only 1,652 remained on Saturday, PTI said.
Tourists and pilgrims also took buses out of the
region, with authorities busing out hundreds of Indian students from Srinagar
colleges.
The order on Friday cited the “prevailing security
situation” and the “latest intelligence inputs of terror threats with specific
targeting” of the annual Hindu pilgrimage as reasons for the advisory. Several
governments issued similar travel advisories.
Kashmiri politicians and ordinary residents fear the
government measures are a prelude to doing away with Kashmir’s special status
and intensifying an ongoing crackdown against anti-India dissenters. Kashmir, a
region known for lush green valleys, lakes, meadows and dense forested
mountains, has become notorious for security lockdowns and crackdowns.
In its election manifesto earlier this year, Prime
Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party promised to
do away with special rights for Kashmiris under India’s constitution.
Rumors continued swirling in the region on Sunday,
ranging from the disarming of Kashmiri police forces, to the Indian military
taking over local police installations, to a sweeping military crackdown being
planned ahead of India’s independence day on Aug. 15.
“India is getting cornered at the geostrategic level
as America seeks Pakistani help for withdrawing from Afghanistan,” said Fayaz
Ahmed, a political science teacher in Srinagar. “In turn, India is mounting
pressure on Pakistan by building up tensions in Kashmir though militaristic
approaches inside Kashmir as well as along the frontier.”
Meanwhile, Pakistan late Saturday accused India of
using banned cluster munitions to target the civilian population, killing two
people. The Indian army rejected the claim, saying Indian soldiers killed at
least five attackers while foiling an attempt by gunmen from Pakistan’s side of
Kashmir to target an Indian post.
Rebels in Indian-controlled Kashmir have been
fighting Indian control since 1989. Most Kashmiris support the rebels’ demand
that the territory be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent
country, while also participating in civilian street protests against Indian
control. About 70,000 people have been killed in the uprising and the ensuing
Indian crackdown.