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Friday, April 19, 2024 | Back issues
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No Phones, No Friends: Kashmiri Children Despair in Lockdown

In a tiny building in a cramped narrow lane in Kashmir's main city of Srinagar, Mohammad Saleem and his family are cut off from the world and trapped in their home as an Indian military lockdown enters its third week.

SRINIGAR, Kashmir (AFP) — In a tiny building in a cramped narrow lane in Kashmir's main city of Srinagar, Mohammad Saleem and his family are cut off from the world and trapped in their home as an Indian military lockdown enters its third week.

New Delhi imposed the strict movement and communications clampdown hours before stripping the restive Himalayan region of its autonomy on Aug. 5, in a bid to quell any unrest triggered by the controversial move.

The security measures have exacted a toll on the valley's children, who are going stir-crazy from the isolation and lack of communication with friends.

"I can't study, connect with any of my friends and can't even go out because of all these restrictions," Saleem's 13-year-old son Shayan told Agence France-Presse.

"I really miss going to school. We used to play a lot there. We have been sitting at one place now, what do we do here?"

Father-of-three Saleem said his younger daughter moved to live with her grandmother as she was "feeling caged," pointing to a small hall in the first floor of his home where the family has spent most of its time.

Indian authorities reopened schools in some parts of Kashmir on Monday, but classrooms were largely empty, with parents keeping their children at home.

With mobile phone networks still down and only some landlines in operation, families don't want to be separated from their children without being able to check on them.

One parent fretting about his children's studies is businessman Showkat Shafi, who has decided not to send his two daughters, age 8 and 13, back to school until tensions ease.

There have been regular bouts of demonstrations in some parts of Kashmir despite the lockdown, with security personnel firing tear gas and pellet guns.

"It has become really difficult to live like this," Showkat, whose dye factory has been shut amid the lockdown, told AFP in the residential district of Nowshera.

"I don't know how much longer this will continue. What else can we do now but ask them to not leave their home and just study or keep themselves busy."

For Saleem, the outbreaks of violence also trigger another fear — that he'll be mistaken as a protester and locked up by authorities amid the sweeping crackdown.

His home is next to Srinagar's main mosque, Jama Masjid, where protests regularly break out. Authorities have kept the mosque shut since early August; they view this old part of the city as a hotbed of dissent.

At least 4,000 people have been detained in the past two weeks under the Public Safety Act, which allows imprisonment for up to two years without charge or trial, government sources said.

Meanwhile, families’ food rations are ,depleted and Saleem, a door-to-door women's clothing salesman who lives hand-to-mouth, hopes to feed his family by borrowing money.

His daughter Iram is in her first year of college and dreams of becoming a teacher.

With no sign from Indian authorities on when they will lift the curfew and restore communications services, despair rather than hope fills her thoughts now.

"I can't study because the internet is down. ... I can't go anywhere. Where do I go? What do I do now?" Iram asked.

"Everyone's future is getting destroyed. The young here live in fear. The moment you go out, you have stone pelting, tear gas, curfew. ... I feel that there isn't as much injustice anywhere in the world than there is for the children in Kashmir."

© Agence France-Presse

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