Srinagar, September 12 : With mobile services suspended on Monday and few signs of any celebrations, the Kashmir Valley braced for a tense Eid on Tuesday with separatists calling for a march to the office of United Nations Military Observers Group in India and Pakistan (UNMOGIP) here.
All mobile phone services, apart from BSNL’s post-paid connections, were suspended across the valley on Monday, the 66th day of the shutdown, as intelligence officials said there were “inputs that separatists are planning large-scale violence on Eid in Srinagar and elsewhere”.
Authorities have decided to impose curfew and restrictions in select areas to prevent the march to the UNMOGIP office in the Sonwar area of Srinagar.
Even as shops, businesses, schools and colleges, petrol bunks and offices remained shut on a call by separatists, now extended to September 16, sources said even broadband Internet facility on fixed landlines could be suspended on Tuesday to check the spread of rumours.
Though some areas on Srinagar’s outskirts had some shops selling essentials ahead of the festival, two of the most sought-after food items on Eid -- mutton and breads -- remained largely unavailable to the people of the valley.
Separatists have appealed for austere Eid celebrations as a mark of respect for the victims of the ongoing unrest, sparked by the July 8 killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani. The toll in the unrest stands at 80, including two policemen, and several thousand injured, many of them partially or fully blinded by pellets used for crowd control.
Security personnel have been deployed in Srinagar and other places in the valley. A senior police official told IANS, “Restrictions have been imposed in Anantnag, Kulgam, Shopian and Pulwama districts.” The curbs have also been imposed in Khanyar, Nowhatta and M R Gunj police station areas of Srinagar city, the official said. The valley will remain shut despite Eid celebrations on Tuesday, he added.
Meanwhile, security forces found the body of a fourth militant inside an under construction mini secretariat building in Jammu and Kashmir’s Poonch district, where a gunfight began on Sunday.
A senior police official said while carrying out room-to-room searches in the building in Poonch town, security forces found the body, taking the toll of militants killed in the operation to four.
On Sunday morning, the holed-up guerrillas had started a gunfight with the security forces which resulted in the killing of three militants and one policeman.
Five others -- a police official, a civilian and three soldiers -- were injured in the attack.
Authorities said ‘Carvan-e-Aman’, the weekly bus service across the Line of