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Death toll rises in Kashmir demonstrations

Kashmiri youths use wooden debris as they strike a government vehicle which had been set on fire by a mob during a demonstration in Srinagar on August 4, 2010, who were protesting over the recent deaths in The Kashmir Valley. Five more demonstrators died in Indian Kashmir as new protests erupted in defiance of pleas for calm from the region's chief minister, the deaths again brought huge crowds chanting anti-India slogans on to the streets of Srinagar as the bodies of two dead men were carried on stretchers to their funerals.. The death in early June of a 17-year-old student -- killed by a police tear-gas shell -- set off the series of almost daily protests during which scores of people have been killed, 27 of them since July 30. At least 44 people have died in the weeks of unrest -- most of them killed by security forces trying to disperse angry protests against Indian rule. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (UPI) Aug 4, 2010
The death toll in India's disputed northern Kashmir area rose to 24 after police opened fire on rioters, killing two people and injuring five more.

Some of the worst clashes between police and demonstrators have been in the Kashmir Valley area's main city Srinagar.

A curfew has been in place in all 10 districts of the Kashmir Valley area for a week because of demonstrations against Indian rule.

The Kashmir Valley -- 85 miles long and 20 miles wide -- lies between Himalayas and the Pir Panjal mountain range. Its population of 4 million is mainly Muslim. India's northern state of Jammu and Kashmir periodically erupts violence where demonstrators demand the area be handed over to neighboring Pakistan.

Protests and ensuing violence are never far from the surface in the troubled Kashmir area. The British colonial rulers divided the region between the new states of the Hindi religion-dominated India and Muslim-dominated Pakistan.

Indian Kashmir remains Muslim-dominated and for the past 21 years, since the smashing of the Berlin wall, the Muslim majority have pushed for what they believe is their right to join Pakistan.

The latest unrest was sparked off in June when a 17-year-old student was killed by a police tear gas shell.

Despite the curfew people have been demonstrating continually for at least a week, burning cars and piles of tires in street, throwing stones at security forces and blockading roads in Srinagar.

In the nearby town of Budgam, police demanded demonstrators disperse and opened fire when they refused, hospitalizing two people, media reports said.

In another area of Srinagar, security forces reportedly opened fire, killing 25-year-old Mehraj Ahmed Lone and injuring three others, they said.

Last weekend saw some of the worst clashes, including one in which four civilians died in an explosion. In the Khrew area of Srinagar a mob set fire to a police station that housed explosives and a large liquid propane gas cylinder.

A mob later laid siege to another police station around 12 miles from Srinagar. Military units were rushed to the area to rescue the trapped policemen.

The continuing violence - the worst in two years -- prompted an emergency meeting in New Delhi between Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

After the meeting earlier in the week Abdullah publicly appealed for calm in the state to break the violence that is becoming too common.

"Tragically, we have locked ourselves into a cycle of violence where protests lead to death leading to further protests, leading to further casualties," Abdullah told a news conference.

The central government agreed to send nearly 2,000 paramilitary personnel to Kashmir and concentrate 3,200 security personnel already in the state into the worst hit areas in the Kashmir Valley.

earlier related report
UN 'concerned' by expansion of Nepal, Maoist armies
Kathmandu (AFP) Aug 4, 2010 - The United Nations says it is "deeply concerned" at plans by Nepal's national army and its Maoist counterpart to recruit new soldiers, four years after the end of a bloody civil war.

Both armies have begun moves to expand their forces in recent weeks, sparking fears of a possible slide back to conflict in the troubled Himalayan nation, which has been without a government for more than a month.

The UN Mission in Nepal (UNMIN) said recruitment by either army would breach the 2006 peace agreement that ended the war between the Maoist guerrillas and the state.

"UNMIN is deeply concerned at reports that the Nepal army and the Maoist army plan to undertake fresh recruitment," said a statement issued late Tuesday.

"UNMIN has written to the government and the UCPN-M (Maoist party) advising them to respect past agreements and to act in this matter with good faith towards the United Nations."

UNMIN was set up in 2007 with a mandate to oversee the peace process, which has faltered in recent years as mistrust between the Maoist party and their political rivals has grown.

Thousands of former Maoist fighters confined to camps around the country after the war are still waiting for an agreement between the parties on integrating them with the national army.

Negotiations on their future have stalled completely since the government collapsed in June under intense pressure from the Maoists, the largest party in parliament.



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