SRINAGAR: Fresh clashes erupted between security forces and mourners on Wednesday in India-held Kashmir after two more civilians were killed in the restive region, a police officer said.
Paramilitary forces fired tear gas and pellet guns at angry mourners gathered near Pampore town for the funeral of a resident shot dead the day before, the officer said.
“Thousands of people gathered in the area and many from other areas crossed the river avoiding restrictions. Now we have clashes after the young man was buried,” the local officer, who was not authorised to speak to media, told AFP.
The resident was killed on Tuesday night when the bodyguard of a top district administrator fired his service weapon at protesters who had stopped the pair’s car, witnesses said.
The demonstrators had blocked the main highway, angry over alleged police raids on mosques in the area, the witnesses said.
“One protester died in the shooting and another was critically wounded,” deputy inspector general of police for the area, Ghulam Hassan Bhat, told AFP.
With the latest shooting the death toll reached 52 in ongoing anti-India protests in the disputed territory and clashes with government forces that have also left nearly 4,000 injured.
In a separate incident, a security guard of a bank ATM also died on Tuesday night when he was driving his scooter to work in Srinagar.
Doctors at the main hospital in Srinagar, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he had been shot with a pellet gun from close range.
Mourners for the ATM guard shouted anti-India slogans and clashed in Srinagar with security forces, an AFP photographer on the scene said.
“We are receiving a number of people injured with pellets,” the same doctor at the SMHS hospital said of those clashes.
The killing of a young and popular rebel leader, Burhan Wani, on July 8 in a firefight with government forces sent the region spiraling into daily protests against Indian rule and clashes with government forces.
The region has remained locked down since, as separatists opposed to Indian rule called for strikes and protests and authorities responded by suspending most mobile networks and internet and clamped rolling curfews in large parts of the territory including Srinagar.
Rights groups say 70,000 people, mostly civilians, have died in the fighting since 1989 when the armed rebellion against Indian rule began.