BFF-04,05 India’s Modi hails ‘path-breaking’ Kashmir move

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India’s Modi hails ‘path-breaking’ Kashmir move

NEW DELHI, Aug 15, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Prime Minister Narendra Modi hailed on
Thursday his “path-breaking” move to strip the restive region of Kashmir of
its autonomy, in a tub-thumping speech marking Indian Independence Day.

Parts of Kashmir that India controls — it is split with arch-rival
Pakistan — have been under lockdown since August 4, with freedom of movement
restricted and phones and the internet cut.

A day later New Delhi scrapped Article 370 in the Indian constitution that
had granted Kashmir special status, splitting the state of Jammu and Kashmir
in two and downgrading them to union territories.

Modi, in a speech from the ramparts of the Red Fort in Delhi, said Thursday
that the decision was one of several “path-breaking” moves by his newly re-
elected administration.

He said “fresh thinking” was needed after seven decades of failure to
ensure harmony in the region.

“We do not believe in creating problems or prolonging them. In less than 70
days of the new government, Article 370 has become history. And in both
houses of parliament, two-thirds of the members supported this step,” said
Modi, 68.

“Jammu-Kashmir and Ladakh will become a big inspiration for India’s growth
journey, comfort, progress and peace,” he said. Ladakh is the newly carved-
out union territory.

“The old arrangement in Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh encouraged corruption and
nepotism, as well as injustice when it came to rights of women, children,
(low-caste) Dalits, tribal communities,” he said.

“Their dreams get new wings,” he said.

– Extra troops –

Pakistan has launched a diplomatic offensive aimed at reversing the order
and formally asked the United Nations Security Council late Tuesday to hold
an emergency session to address India’s “illegal actions”.

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, who has compared Modi’s government to
Nazi Germany, said Wednesday that time had come to teach Delhi a lesson and
promised to “fight until the end” against any Indian aggression.

MORE/SSS/1117 hrs

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“The Pakistani army has solid information that they (India) are planning to
do something in Pakistani Kashmir, and they are ready and will give a solid
response,” Khan said in Muzaffarabad, capital of Pakistan-administered
Kashmir.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan since independence from
Britain in 1947, and has been the spark for two major wars and countless
clashes between the two nuclear-armed arch-rivals.

Fearing protests and unrest over India’s latest move, tens of thousands of
extra Indian troops have been deployed to Kashmir — joining 500,000 already
there — turning parts of the main city of Srinagar into a fortress of
roadblocks and barbed wire.

University professors, business leaders and activists are among more than
500 people taken into custody in the region, some of them spirited away to
other locations around India, according to press reports.

Restrictions have been lifted in the Jammu region, where Hindus are in a
majority, according to the government, but remain in place in the Kashmir
Valley, the main hotbed of resistance to Indian rule over decades.

“Restrictions imposed in Jammu have been completely removed and schools and
other establishments there are functioning,” local police official Munir Khan
told Indian media. “Restrictions will continue in some places of Kashmir for
some time,” he said.

The lockdown has not completely prevented anger bursting out into the open,
however.

According to residents around 8,000 people protested after Friday prayers,
with security forces firing tear gas and pellet-firing shotguns to break up
the rally.

Only on Tuesday did the Indian government confirm that clashes, blaming
them on stone-throwing “miscreants” and saying its forces reacted with
“restraint”.

Footage filmed by AFP on Monday showed hundreds of people protesting in the
Soura area of Srinagar, shouting slogans such as “We want freedom” and “India
go back” as helicopters buzzed overhead.

Modi’s 90-minute speech ended with the prime minister leading chants of
“Jai Hind” (“Long live India”) with schoolchildren dressed in the saffron,
white and green of the Indian flag, before a rendition of the national
anthem.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1118 hrs