Hundreds of protesters tried to storm a military airbase in Jammu and Kashmir yesterday, the third day of deadly clashes between government forces and demonstrators angered by the killing of a popular young rebel.
Police said 30 people had now died in the violence, most of them protesters killed by gunshot wounds as government forces fired live ammunition and tear gas to try to enforce a curfew imposed across the Kashmir Valley.
Thousands again defied the curfew to take to the streets yesterday.
Police said several hundred protesters tried to storm an Indian Air Force base about 25km south of the capital Srinagar as the worst civilian unrest since 2010 spread.
“A few hundred protesters stormed the air force base,” said a senior officer on condition of anonymity.
“We do not know if firearms were used, but the protesters were pushed back,” he said, adding there were no immediate reports of casualties.
Protesters also set police stations and vehicles on fire.
On Sunday one police officer drowned when his armoured vehicle was pushed into a river.
The demonstrations follow the killing on Friday of Burhan Wani, a 22-year-old commander of Kashmir’s largest militant group Hizbul Mujahideen (HM), during a gun battle with government forces.
HM is one of several homegrown militant groups that have for decades been fighting around half a million troops deployed in the state, calling for independence or a merger with Pakistan.
Around 300 people have been injured, including nearly 100 police, and hospitals say they are overwhelmed.
There were also reports of injured protesters being targeted - one local doctors’ association said on Sunday that tear gas canisters had been fired inside a hospital emergency room.
Another group, the Jammu and Kashmir Coalition for Civil Society, alleged that police had attacked ambulances taking the wounded to hospital.
The state government has called for calm and has cut off Internet and mobile phone networks to try to stop the protests spreading.
It is the worst civilian violence to hit the state since 2010, when mass protests broke out against Indian rule.
Violence has sharply declined in recent years following a major crackdown by the hundreds of thousands of forces deployed in the state.
But a recent uptick in militant attacks has galvanised frustrated young Kashmiris, many of whom deeply resent the military’s presence.
Wani joined the HM rebel group at the age of just 15 after his brother was allegedly tortured by government forces.
His strong presence on social media where he posted pictures of himself in army fatigues and videos of his band of fighters, made him a rallying point for Kashmir’s youth and tens of thousands of mourners attended his funeral.
Yesterday, separatist leaders said a shutdown protesting his death should be extended by two more days, and called a rally in Srinagar on Friday.
Also yesterday, paramilitary troops evacuated 23,000 pilgrims left stranded after authorities shut the main highway.
The government has decided to suspend the annual pilgrimage to the Amarnath shrine, one of Hinduism’s most revered sites 12,800ft above sea level.
A Kashmiri woman walks past policemen on a street during a curfew in Srinagar yesterday.