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Pro-India Kashmiri leader quits over Modi’s ‘brutal policy’

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Web Desk
Web Desk
News Stories Posted by ARY News Digital Team

Tariq Hameed Karra, a key member of the People’s Democratic Party, said he quit to express his anger over the “brutal policy'” followed by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government and the acquiescence of his party, a coalition partner.

His decision is a setback for his party in Indian-held Kashmir, which has been wracked by massive protests for the past two months following the killing of a popular separatist leader.

More than 100 people have been killed and thousands wounded, mostly by Indian forces firing bullets and shotgun pellets to quell the protests.

Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed by both. Most Kashmiris want an end to Indian rule and favour independence or a merger with Pakistan.

With the entire Kashmir Valley under a strict curfew, most people stayed indoors for the Muslim festival of Eid-ul-Azha on Tuesday. Usually bustling on the holiday, places of worship and marketplaces were deserted.

“For the first time in history, the people of Kashmir were not allowed to offer Eid prayers. Certain shrines and even the Grand Mosque were locked,” Karra told reporters on Thursday in Srinagar, the main city in the region.

“Kashmiri blood is being spilled on the walls, lanes and drains of the valley,” he said.

He accused the Indian government of brutality and insensitivity toward Kashmir.

Separatist leaders have repeatedly urged police officers and politicians during the current unrest “to disengage from the Indian state.'”

Early this month, protesters set fire to the house of Nazir Laway, a local lawmaker in south Kashmir.

The governing People’s Democratic Party is now left with two lawmakers in India’s Parliament representing the region.

It emerged in the early 2000s as the strongest opponent to the National Conference, a regional rival that is now an opposition party, using pro-separatist views for electoral gains. It first came to power in Kashmir in 2002 and assumed power for a second time in 2015 in coalition with Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party after failing to win enough seats to form a government on its own.

“Though I was all along feeling suffocated” by his party’s alliance with Modi’s party, “my conscience was shaken during the last two months,” Karra said.

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