Violence in Kashmir lowest in 20 Years

deepak pace

DJ_DEE
Srinagar: Separatist violence in Kashmir has fallen to its lowest level since an insurgency began nearly two decades ago, police said on Friday, but almost 1,000 terrorists are still operating in the region.

Officials say violence between Indian troops and terrorists started a steady decline in 2004 after India and Pakistan started a slow-moving peace process.

In an offensive against terrorists in Jammu and Kashmir this year, security forces killed 350 of them, including 67 top-ranking commanders of different groups, Kashmir police director-general Kuldeep Khuda said.

The number of militant incidents fell by about 40 per cent to 700 compared with last year, the lowest in the insurgency's history, Khuda said in a statement.

There are nearly 250 foreign terrorists among close to the 1,000 operating in Kashmir, Khuda added.

These include members of the banned Pakistan-based group Lashkar-e-Taiba, which New Delhi blames for last month's Mumbai attacks which killed 217 people.

India has imposed a "pause" in the dialogue with Pakistan since the strike by on the financial hub.

Separatists called for a boycott of state elections in Kashmir, which ended this week, the third ballot since the insurgency began in 1989.

The election was relatively trouble-free. Officials say more than 47,000 people have been killed in nearly two decades of violence in Kashmir, which was hit by massive anti-India protests earlier this year.

Separatists put the toll at 100,000. On Friday at least 18 people were hurt in downtown Srinagar when demonstrators clashed with troops, police and witnesses said.

Police with batons fired teargas shells and chased hundreds of stone-throwing separatists who cried "we want freedom", witnesses said.
 
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