Curfew imposed in three towns of Kashmir

October 30, 2010 12:26 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 05:19 am IST - Srinagar

Kashmiri muslim girls walk on a deserted street  During a curfew in Jehangir chowk  Srinagar on 12, Oct 2010. Curfew was imposed across Kashmir Valley Tuesday to scuttle a protest march in Srinagar called by separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani even as security men were instructed to allow students to appear for secondary school board exams without hindrance.

Kashmiri muslim girls walk on a deserted street During a curfew in Jehangir chowk Srinagar on 12, Oct 2010. Curfew was imposed across Kashmir Valley Tuesday to scuttle a protest march in Srinagar called by separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani even as security men were instructed to allow students to appear for secondary school board exams without hindrance.

Curfew was on Saturday clamped in three towns of north Kashmir as authorities apprehended breach of peace even as normal life in the rest of the Valley was disrupted due to a strike called by the hardline Hurriyat Conference.

Curfew was imposed in Delina and Palahalan towns of Baramulla district and Bandipora district town in the wee hours, a police spokesman said.

The restrictions were clamped as a precautionary measure following reports that some persons were planning to create law and order problems.

Bandipora has witnessed clashes between protestors and security forces after a shopkeeper was arrested by police recently.

Although there were no restrictions elsewhere in the Valley, normal life remained affected due to the strike called by Hurriyat Conference led by Syed Ali Shah Geelani.

Shops, business establishments and private offices remained closed in most parts of the Valley.

Public transport services also remained off the roads but private vehicles were plying in the city in large numbers.

The strike comes after the Valley witnessed two days of normalcy as Geelani, who is spearheading the ongoing agitation, had exempted Thursday and Friday from the purview of its strike calendar.

Kashmir Valley has been in a grip of protests, strikes and curfew since June when a 17-year-old boy was killed by a tear smoke shell allegedly fired by police at Rajouri Kadal area of the city.

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