Agencies/New Delhi

 

 

Folk artists and dancers take part in the Republic Day parade in New Delhi yesterday
India celebrated its Republic Day yesterday under heavy security, with tensions running high in Jammu and Kashmir over efforts by the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party to hold a rally in the troubled state’s capital.

Security was especially tight in New Delhi where large sections of the capital were sealed off for the annual parade of military hardware and cultural diversity.

Around 35,000 police personnel, including 15,000 members of the paramilitary forces, were deployed across the city for the event, which is always considered a possible target of militant attack.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was the guest of honour.

Snipers manned rooftops along the parade route, while helicopters and unmanned surveillance drones monitored the area from above.

In Kashmir, where an anti-India insurgency has claimed thousands of lives since 1989, a strict curfew was enforced in the summer capital Srinagar.

The streets were deserted apart from the large numbers of security personnel who manned barbed-wire barricades on the roads.

“No procession or gathering would be allowed in any part of the city, today,” Srinagar district magistrate Meraj Kakroo said.

A senior pro-independence separatist politician, Yasin Malik, was arrested along with a handful of activists as they tried to stage an impromptu protest in the city centre.

The Kashmir Valley is usually tense on Republic Day, but particularly so this year because of a drive by activists of the BJP to march to Srinagar and hold a special rally to raise the national flag.

Authorities had blocked road links between Kashmir and neighbouring states on Tuesday and turned back thousands of BJP activists gathered on the state border.

Several senior BJP leaders were arrested, amid appeals by the Kashmir government and the federal government in New Delhi to call off the “provocative” march.

Kashmir has been riven by religious and separatist conflict for the past 20 years.

The BJP favours a hardline approach in the region, refusing any dilution of national sovereignty or relaxation of tough military laws that have been condemned by human rights groups.

Ministers had warned that the BJP rally could trigger fresh protests in the Kashmir Valley, where at least 100 protesters were killed in massive anti-India demonstrations last year.

Other regions including the restive northeastern states and areas affected by the Maoist rebellion also remained on high alert.

Tribal militants bombed a freight train and attacked a bus, wounding three people in Assam on Tuesday.

In another incident on Tuesday, suspected Maoist rebels captured five policemen in the central state of Chhattisgarh.

In her annual Republic Day address, President Pratibha Patil flagged corruption and inflation as two of the main challenges facing the world’s second-fastest growing major economy.

“Corruption is the enemy of development and good governance. Instead of getting lost in this mire, it is necessary to rise above it,” Patil said.

The Congress Party-led government has spent the past six months battling a series of damaging scandals.

The entire winter session of parliament was lost due to protests from the opposition over the so-called 2G scam, in which former telecom minister A Raja is accused of selling telecom licences at hugely discounted prices.

While welcoming the pace of economic growth, Patil warned of the plight of those being left behind and labelled soaring food prices as “cause for serious concern.”

In a bid to keep inflation in check, the central Reserve Bank of India hiked interest rates on Tuesday to their highest level since early 2008.