SRINAGAR: Assailants on Saturday fatally shot a Kashmiri Hindu man in violence police blamed on militants fighting against Indian rule in the disputed region.
Police said armed men fired at Puran Krishan Bhat, who is from the minority community of Kashmiri Hindus, at his home in the southern Shopian district. He was taken to a hospital where he died, police said in a statement.
Police and soldiers cordoned off the area and launched a search for the attackers.
In August, a local Hindu man was killed and his brother injured in Shopian in a shooting that police also blamed on armed men.
Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed by both in its entirety.
Pro-freedom fighters in the Indian-occupied portion of Kashmir have been fighting New Delhi’s rule since 1947.
India insists the Kashmir freedom campaign is Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge, and the people of Kashmir consider it a legitimate freedom struggle. Tens of thousands of civilians, fighters and government forces have been killed in the conflict.
Kashmir has witnessed a spate of targeted killings since October last year. Several Hindus, including immigrant workers from Indian states, have been killed. Police say the killings — including that of Muslim village councilors, police officers and civilians — have been carried out by anti-India fighters.
The spate of killings comes as Indian troops have continued their so-called counter-insurgency operations across the region amid a clampdown on dissent and press freedom, which critics have likened to a militaristic policy.
Kashmir’s minority Hindus, who are locally known as Pandits, have long fretted over their place in the region. Most of an estimated 200,000 of them fled Kashmir in the 1990s when an armed rebellion against Indian rule began.
Some 4,000 returned after 2010 as part of a government resettlement plan that provided them with jobs and housing.