More attacks in Kashmir

More attacks in Kashmir
Updated 24 July 2015 22:21
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More attacks in Kashmir

More attacks in Kashmir

MUZAFFARABAD, Pakistan: A Pakistan-based militant group has disowned a splinter faction suspected of a string of killings in Indian-occupied Kashmir, with the rebuke followed swiftly on Friday by a string of attacks on telecoms facilities in the state’s main city.
The escalating rivalry is fueling concern that rogue insurgents could ratchet up tension between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan.
Hizbul Mujahideen, a Kashmiri separatist group whose leader, Syed Salahuddin, is based in Pakistan, said on Thursday it had expelled Abdul Qayoom Najar over his involvement in “gruesome murder” and the “character assassination of established pro-freedom leadership.”
Indian security forces say Najar leads a breakaway group called Lashkar-e-Islam that has perpetrated a series of attacks around Sopore, killing five people including telecoms vendors and former militants.
In an apparent escalation on Friday, three more attacks were carried out on telecoms facilities in the Muslim-majority state’s summer capital of Srinagar, one of them near the office of Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed.
Sayeed, who leads the People’s Democratic Party that seeks self-rule, rules Jammu and Kashmir in an uneasy coalition with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party.
A senior police officer said one person had been injured in the attack near the chief minister’s office, which declined to comment.
Earlier, militants threw grenades inside two mobile phone shops in Srinagar, injuring one person.
Lashkar-e-Islam has warned people to stop working for telecommunications companies, saying that Indian security forces are using mobile phone services to target members of the group.
The decision to expel Najar was taken by Hizbul Mujahideen’s command council headed by Salahuddin, a 69-year-old Islamic preacher who turned to militancy in the late 1980s.
Analysts say the emergence of a breakaway faction could mean that a new generation of Kashmiri militants is trying to force aside the ageing separatist leadership — inspired by rebels elsewhere who have resorted to extreme violence and spread their message through social media.