IANS
SRINAGAR, APRIL 18
A teenager was killed in Kashmir during firing by security forces who battled stone pelting protesters on Saturday, the day hardliner separatist Yasin Malik and social activist Swami Agnivesh were taken into preventive custody as they headed to the village where violence broke out.Kashmir was on the boil for the second day on Saturday.
Suhail Ahmad Sofi was killed when the security forces opened fire while tackling protesters in Narbal village of Badgam, 18 km from here. The fierce protest took place on the road that connects Srinagar with the popular tourist resort of Gulmarg.
Police, in a statement, admitted that the standard operating procedure (SOP) were violated by those security personnel who opened fire at the mob in Narbal village.
The protesters smashed vehicles plying on the road, police said.
After batons and tear-gas failed to quell protesters, security personnel used fire-arms against them, police said.
Sofi suffered a gunshot injury and was taken to the Jhelum Valley Hospital in Srinagar where doctors pronounced him dead, a senior police officer told IANS.
Protesters blocked the Srinagar-Gulmarg road, squatting with the body of the slain youth. They refused to bury the teenager's body unless those responsible for the firing incident were identified and brought to justice.
Tension gripped Narbal after the news about the teenager's death spread in the area.
The protest was staged in the village following a call for shutdown in the Kashmir Valley against the arrest of separatist leader Masrat Alam.
Just a day earlier, over two dozen people, including security personnel, were injured in Srinagar where violence broke out after Friday prayers over Alam's detention.
Earlier in the day, Malik, who heads the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF), and Agnivesh sat on a symbolic hunger strike in Maisuma locality of Srinagar city along with activists of JKLF against the government's proposal to set up composite townships for migrant Pandits in the valley.
In the afternoon, they decided to proceed to Narbal village where the teenager died in firing by security forces earlier in the morning.
"Yasin Malik and Swami Agnivesh have been taken into preventive custody to maintain law and order in the city. They have been lodged inside the Kothibagh police station," a senior police officer said here.
Swami Agnivesh, however, told IANS that he and Malik were "not arrested, but only detained for 10-15 minutes". He said he will leave for Delhi by evening.
"I don't know why the media called it an arrest," he said.
The police statement, issued after the Narbal youth's death, said police along with paramilitary police were deployed to contain the situation. The deployed forces came under heavy stone pelting. "To control the situation, they fired a few rounds," resulting in injuries to Sofi. "Unfortunately the injured later succumbed to his injuries in the hospital. We regret the unfortunate incident."
It said that "preliminary inquiry conducted in the matter indicates that the forces deployed have acted in violation of the laid down SOP."The state government overnight added charges of sedition and waging war against the country to Alam's other charges. On Friday, after being placed under preventive house arrest at his Zaindar Mohalla locality home in old Srinagar city, Alam was shifted first to the nearby Shaheedgunj police station and later to Humhama police station in Badgam district.
An FIR was lodged against him and separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani on April 14 after Pakistan flags were displayed and anti-India slogans shouted by youth during a separatist rally.
Yaseen Malik, Swami Agnivesh detained
PTI
SRINAGAR, APRIL 18
JKLF chairman Yaseen Malik and social activist Swami Agnivesh were today detained when they tried to lead a march towards Narbal in central Kashmir's Budgam district where a youth was killed in firing by security forces during a protest.
Police took the two into preventive custody at Maisuma as they attempted to take out a march towards Narbal, where Suhail Ahmad Sofi was killed and two others were injured when security forces opened fire at demonstrators who were protesting against the killing of two youths in an army operation in Tral area of south Kashmir earlier this week.
Agnivesh had joined Malik this morning in the 30-hour hunger strike against the proposal to create separate settlements for Kashmiri migrant Pandits.
Speaking to reporters, Malik said the people of Kashmir would not allow the "division of the people" in the name of creation of separate colonies for Kashmiri migrant Pandits.
"We will not allow these colonies at any cost. We have to live together and die together," he said.
Malik said the Pandit community should talk to the people of Kashmir rather than the government for their return.
"If Pandit brothers have any concerns, they should directly talk to us... The people of Kashmir or to the civil society here. Let them talk to us rather than the government. We want to recreate that atmosphere of peace, love and brotherhood between the communities which was here before the militancy," he said.
He condemned the killing of the youth in the firing. "We declared unilateral ceasefire and after that people of Kashmir had shown a transition from violent movement to non-violent democratic movement... If this kind of attitude continues ...Are you not pushing the boys on a militant path," he said
Agnivesh said Kashmir is known for its secular character and Kashmiriyat and the government should leave the issue of the return of the migrant Pandits to the people.