A civilian protester and a suspected militant were killed in clashes with security forces Wednesday in India-held Kashmir, police said.
After receiving a tip-off about suspected rebels in Naina, some 35 kilometres (22 miles) south of the main city of Srinagar, soldiers cordoned off the village Tuesday night, triggering a gun battle.
“One militant was killed during the overnight encounter,” Nitish Kumar, deputy inspector general of police, said.
Hundreds of villagers angry at the killing of the suspected rebel threw rocks at police who fired back using tear gas and bullets, killing one protester and injuring two others, Kumar said.
The protesters, chanting “We want freedom” and “Go India, go back” also torched an armoured police vehicle that was sent to help soldiers withdraw from the area after the gun battle ended.
Kashmir has been divided between South Asian rivals India and Pakistan since the end of the British colonial rule in 1947.
Several pro-freedom groups have for decades fought Indian forces deployed in the restive Himalayan region, either for outright independence or a merger of the India-held territory with Pakistan.
The fighting has left tens of thousands dead, mostly civilians.
Armed violence in the region has sharply declined during the last decade, but encounters between pro-freedom outfits and government forces occur frequently.