By Agence France-Presse
Indian authorities have said they will ease a curfew in troubled Kashmir so the Muslim-majority population can go to Friday prayers with tensions running high over the ending of the region's autonomy.
The Indian-administered part of Kashmir has been in lockdown since Monday with no internet or telephones and severe restrictions on movement as the government cancelled its special autonomous status (AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)
But the giant Jama Masjid mosque in Srinagar -- a longtime focus for separatist protests -- remained closed as the government seeks to keep a lid on unrest after its strongarm measures in the former Himalayan kingdom, media reports said.
"People are allowed to pray within their neighborhood, there is no restriction on that," Dilbag Singh, Kashmir director general of police told AFP.
"But they should not venture out of their local area," he said by telephone.
In a sign of international concerns raised by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's move to tighten control on Kashmir, Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi went to Beijing for hastily arranged talks with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi.
Pakistan, which also claims Kashmir, has strongly condemned India's action but Qureshi has said his country would not seek a new conflict with its neighbor.
China, which also controls a sector of Kashmir, criticized India after the New Delhi government reaffirmed its claim for the whole territory this week.
The Indian-administered part of Kashmir has been in lockdown since Monday with no internet or telephones and severe restrictions on movement as the government cancelled its special autonomous status.
Tens of thousands of extra troops have been sent to the region, in the grip of a three-decade-old insurgency that has left tens of thousands dead, to impose the clampdown.
But there have been sporadic protests, with police chasing groups of pro-separatist demonstrators, many of whom gather at night, residents said.
Friday prayers are the start of a crucial test of New Delhi's ability to enforce the decision by Modi's Hindu nationalist government. The major Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha is on Monday.
The Indian-administered part of Kashmir has been in lockdown since Monday with no internet or telephones and severe restrictions on movement as the government cancelled its special autonomous status (AFP / MANILA BULLETIN)
But the giant Jama Masjid mosque in Srinagar -- a longtime focus for separatist protests -- remained closed as the government seeks to keep a lid on unrest after its strongarm measures in the former Himalayan kingdom, media reports said.
"People are allowed to pray within their neighborhood, there is no restriction on that," Dilbag Singh, Kashmir director general of police told AFP.
"But they should not venture out of their local area," he said by telephone.
In a sign of international concerns raised by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's move to tighten control on Kashmir, Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi went to Beijing for hastily arranged talks with his Chinese counterpart Wang Yi.
Pakistan, which also claims Kashmir, has strongly condemned India's action but Qureshi has said his country would not seek a new conflict with its neighbor.
China, which also controls a sector of Kashmir, criticized India after the New Delhi government reaffirmed its claim for the whole territory this week.
The Indian-administered part of Kashmir has been in lockdown since Monday with no internet or telephones and severe restrictions on movement as the government cancelled its special autonomous status.
Tens of thousands of extra troops have been sent to the region, in the grip of a three-decade-old insurgency that has left tens of thousands dead, to impose the clampdown.
But there have been sporadic protests, with police chasing groups of pro-separatist demonstrators, many of whom gather at night, residents said.
Friday prayers are the start of a crucial test of New Delhi's ability to enforce the decision by Modi's Hindu nationalist government. The major Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha is on Monday.