Saturday | 20 June 2026 | Reg No- 06
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Bangla | Saturday | 20 June 2026 | Epaper
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Pakistani Kashmir faces shutdown as protests leave more than 20 dead

Published : Saturday, 20 June, 2026 at 12:00 AM  Count : 50
MUZAFFARABAD, Jun 19: A territory-wide shutdown in Pakistan-administered Kashmir has brought daily life to a standstill after the region's deadliest unrest in years left at least 24 people dead in nearly two weeks of protests.

The confrontation between local authorities and supporters of the recently banned Joint Awami Action Committee, or JAAC, poses a sensitive challenge for Islamabad, which frequently criticises Delhi's handling of dissent in Indian-administered Kashmir but is now facing anger in the territory under its own control.

The unrest began ahead of a June 9 strike called by the JAAC in protest against the reservation of 12 seats for refugees in the July 27 elections to the region's 45-seat legislative assembly. The refugees live in Pakistan after being displaced from Indian-administered Kashmir.

Protests had already grown in the days before the shutdown, with government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, saying at least 20 civilians were killed between June 6 and June 14 and dozens more wounded.

Regional police chief Liaqat Ali Malik said four officers had been killed and 97 wounded in clashes with protesters, while 515 people had been detained.

Thousands of JAAC supporters are now camped out on the outskirts of Rawalakot, about 100 km (62 miles) south of Muzaffarabad, the regional capital.

The government has responded by shutting main roads, blocking the internet and restricting media access to much of Kashmir.

In Muzaffarabad's Upper Adda commercial district, menial labourers sit idle beneath a red-brick monument, waiting for work that has not come.

"Since June 9, I have not earned a single rupee," said day labourerIkhlaq Ahmed, 27, from a remote village.

The usually busy Upper Adda, once filled with grocers by day and food stalls by night, is mostly silent.

Medical stores and some grocers have begun opening for limited hours, and fruit and vegetable sellers have cautiously returned, but other businesses remain closed.�" REUTERS



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