Two Indian policemen arrested in killing of Kashmiri youth

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Hurriyat supporters on Sunday shout slogans and hold placards in Urdu protesting against the killing of a teenage boy during weekend protests in Srinagar ─ AP
Hurriyat supporters on Sunday shout slogans and hold placards in Urdu protesting against the killing of a teenage boy during weekend protests in Srinagar ─ AP

SRINAGAR: Two Indian policemen have been arrested in the killing of a teenage boy during weekend protests in the disputed region of Kashmir, police said.

Police said in a statement that they arrested two policemen after a preliminary investigation revealed one had ordered the other to fire his rifle at stone-throwing protesters in the northwestern village of Narbal on Saturday “in violation of laid down SOP (standard operating procedure)."

Relatives and witnesses, however, have contested the official story of the boy's death, saying he had been picked up by authorities and was shot on the side of the road while in custody.

Know more: Police shoot teenage protester dead in Indian-held Kashmir

Locals and rights groups have long said that such investigations rarely yield results and are aimed only at calming public anger.

On Saturday night, protesters held a torch-lighting ceremony in Srinagar in the boy's memory.

Towns across the Himalayan territory were mostly quiet Sunday, following two days of clashes between Indian law enforcement authorities and anti-India demonstrators. Streets in the main city of Srinagar were tense, with armed police and paramilitary soldiers inspecting vehicles and questioning people.

Know more: Indian police arrest Kashmiri leader over protest, raising pro-Pakistan slogans

Indian authorities have been struggling to contain growing anger after Friday's arrest of separatist leader Masarat Alam on charges of leading protests against India's rule in the region, just weeks after his release from five years in prison on the same charge.

Kashmir is divided between neighbouring India and Pakistan, and most people within the predominantly Muslim region mistrust Indian rule.

Since an insurgency erupted in 1989, several militant groups in Kashmir have demanded the region be given full independence or merged with Pakistan.

An estimated 68,000 people have died in the fighting and ensuing crackdown by Indian forces. With the insurgency largely suppressed, anti-India sentiment is now expressed mostly through street demonstrations.



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