Curfew continues in Kishtwar; home secy arrives for review

August 16, 2013 12:21 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 11:22 pm IST - Jammu

Security personnel stand guard a market area during curfew in Jammu on Wednesday. Curfew was imposed following large-scale communal violence on Aug 9, in which three people were killed

Security personnel stand guard a market area during curfew in Jammu on Wednesday. Curfew was imposed following large-scale communal violence on Aug 9, in which three people were killed

Curfew continued for the eighth day Friday in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kishtwar town as union Home Secretary Anil Goswami arrived here to review the law and order situation.

The home secretary will also take stock of the situation on the international border.

District Magistrate of Kishtwar Basheer Ahmad Khan told IANS that curfew was relaxed for a while on Thursday during Independence Day celebrations, but later re-imposed.

Curfew was imposed following large-scale communal violence on Aug 9, in which three people were killed. Private and public properties worth millions of rupees were destroyed by rioting mobs.

Curfew was, on Thursday, lifted from all the other seven districts of Jammu region -- Jammu, Kathua, Samba, Reasi, Udhampur, Doda and Rajouri -- where it was imposed on Aug 10 as a precautionary measure.

Authorities have decided that educational institutions in Jammu and other districts would re-open on Monday.

Union Home Secretary Anil Goswami arrived early on Friday in Jammu along with a team of officials.

The home secretary went straight to R.S. Pura in Jammu district to get a first-hand experience of the situation on the international border (IB).

He is set to visit the headquarters of the Border Security Force (BSF) in Paloura in Jammu on Friday to interact with senior officials about the ground realities.

The home secretary will review the law and order situation in Jammu region at a high-level meeting of state and central government officials in winter capital Jammu.

The international border in Jammu and Kashmir is guarded by the BSF, while the Line of Control (LoC) is manned by the army.

Tensions have been running high on the international border and the LoC following repeated violations of the November 2003 ceasefire by the Pakistan Army.

A bilateral ceasefire was signed by India and Pakistan in November 2003 which had been holding for all these years. A modicum of peace had returned because of the bilateral ceasefire in the lives of thousands of people.

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