A strike to demand the release of political prisoners shut down Indian Kashmir on Tuesday, as the chief minister warned that protests were denying an entire generation a proper education. The two-day stoppage, called by separatist groups opposed to Indian rule in the Muslim-majority region, closed businesses, schools and banks in the main city Srinagar and other towns. “The strike is to demand the release of political prisoners who have been languishing in jails for years without any justification,” said Ayaz Akbar, a spokesman for hardline separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani.
Geelani, who favours the region’s accession to Pakistan, has been under almost constant house arrest for the past year, with the authorities accusing him of seeking to incite violence. The separatist-led strike coincided with a wage-related stoppage by government employees.