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Strike in Kashmir over arrests
of women separatists
September 8, 2005 – (Reuters) Shops,
schools and businesses were closed on Thursday in Kashmir's main
city Srinagar in response to a strike call to protest against the
arrest of women separatists.
The strike left streets largely deserted barring armoured security
vehicles and police foot patrols.
The shutdown came as Muslim militants and troops exchanged fire
near a heavily guarded building in Srinagar housing the offices
of the chief minister of Kashmir.
Police said two militants and two policemen were killed in the gunbattle
which began on Wednesday. Three other policemen were wounded in
the firefight, which ended on Thursday after the second militant
was killed.
Violence and protests have continued in Kashmir despite an ongoing
peace process between India and Pakistan, which have fought two
wars over the Himalayan territory.
Later on Thursday, one person was killed and 10 others wounded when
unidentified militants threw a grenade near a crowded bus stop in
Sopore town north of Srinagar, police said.
Elsewhere, four civilians were killed in separate shootouts across
the region.
Thursday's strike was in protest against the arrest of Asiya Andrabi,
the chief of Dukhtaran-e-Milat (Daughters of the Muslim Faith),
who was arrested last week for raiding hotels, restaurants and wine
shops to stamp out the "flesh trade" and check what the
group called the "moral decline" in the Muslim-majority
region.
On Tuesday, authorities charged Andrabi, who wears a head-to-toe
black veil, and seven followers under a tough public safety law,
drawing condemnation from Kashmiri separatist groups.
Syed Ali Shah Geelani, the chief of the hardline faction of the
All Parties Hurriyat Conference, an alliance of separatist political
parties, called the strike.
"The detention of Asiya Andrabi and her activists is a heinous
crime, a shameful act. Their crime is that they raised a voice against
evils in society," Geelani said in a statement.
More than 45,000 people have been killed since the revolt in Jammu
and Kashmir, mainly Hindu India's only Muslim-majority state, started
in 1989. India says Pakistan aids Muslim militants in the region,
a charge Islamabad denies.
From: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SP245988.htm
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