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Saturday, May 10, 2025

Indian police say gunmen kill at least 26 tourists at a resort in disputed Kashmir

by

Newsdesk
17 days ago
20250422
Indian police officers stands guard at a check point near Pahalgam in south Kashmir after assailants indiscriminately opened fired at tourists visiting Pahalgam, Indian controlled Kashmir, Tuesday, April 22, 2025.(AP Photo/Dar Yasin)

Indian police officers stands guard at a check point near Pahalgam in south Kashmir after assailants indiscriminately opened fired at tourists visiting Pahalgam, Indian controlled Kashmir, Tuesday, April 22, 2025.(AP Photo/Dar Yasin)

Dar Yasin

Gun­men shot and killed at least 26 tourists on Tues­day at a re­sort in In­di­an-con­trolled Kash­mir, po­lice said in what ap­peared to be a ma­jor shift in a re­gion­al con­flict in which tourists have large­ly been spared.

Po­lice said it was a “ter­ror at­tack” and blamed mil­i­tants fight­ing against In­di­an rule. “This at­tack is much larg­er than any­thing we’ve seen di­rect­ed at civil­ians in re­cent years,” Omar Ab­dul­lah, the re­gion’s top elect­ed of­fi­cial, wrote on so­cial me­dia.

Two se­nior po­lice of­fi­cers said at least four gun­men, whom they de­scribed as mil­i­tants, fired at dozens of tourists from close range. The of­fi­cers said at least three dozen peo­ple were wound­ed, many of them re­port­ed to be in se­ri­ous con­di­tion.

Most of the killed tourists were In­di­an, the of­fi­cers said, speak­ing on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty in keep­ing with de­part­men­tal pol­i­cy. Of­fi­cials col­lect­ed at least 24 bod­ies in Bais­aran mead­ow, some 5 kilo­me­ters (3 miles) from the dis­put­ed re­gion’s re­sort town of Pa­hal­gam. Two oth­ers died while be­ing tak­en for med­ical treat­ment.

There was no im­me­di­ate claim of re­spon­si­bil­i­ty. Po­lice and sol­diers were search­ing for the at­tack­ers.

“We will come down heav­i­ly on the per­pe­tra­tors with the harsh­est con­se­quences,” In­dia’s home min­is­ter, Amit Shah, wrote on so­cial me­dia. He ar­rived in Sri­na­gar, the main city in In­di­an-con­trolled Kash­mir, and con­vened a meet­ing with top se­cu­ri­ty of­fi­cials.

In­di­an Prime Min­is­ter Naren­dra Mo­di was cut­ting short his two-day vis­it to Sau­di Ara­bia and re­turn­ing to New Del­hi ear­ly Wednes­day, the Press Trust of In­dia news agency re­port­ed.

Mir­waiz Umar Fa­rooq, a key re­sis­tance politi­cian and Kash­mir’s top re­li­gious cler­ic, con­demned what he de­scribed as a “cow­ard­ly at­tack on tourists,” writ­ing on so­cial me­dia that “such vi­o­lence is un­ac­cept­able and against the ethos of Kash­mir which wel­comes vis­i­tors with love and warmth.”

The gun­fire co­in­cid­ed with the vis­it to In­dia of U.S. Vice Pres­i­dent JD Vance, who called it a “dev­as­tat­ing ter­ror­ist at­tack.” He added on so­cial me­dia: “Over the past few days, we have been over­come with the beau­ty of this coun­try and its peo­ple. Our thoughts and prayers are with them as they mourn this hor­rif­ic at­tack.”

U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump on so­cial me­dia not­ed “deeply dis­turb­ing news out of Kash­mir. The Unit­ed States stands strong with In­dia against ter­ror­ism.” Oth­er glob­al lead­ers, in­clud­ing Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin and Ital­ian Prime Min­is­ter Gior­gia Mel­oni, con­demned the at­tack.

“The Unit­ed States stands with In­dia,” U.S. Sec­re­tary of State Mar­co Ru­bio said on X.

Nu­clear-armed ri­vals In­dia and Pak­istan each ad­min­is­ter a part of Kash­mir but both claim the ter­ri­to­ry in its en­tire­ty.

Kash­mir has seen a spate of tar­get­ed killings of Hin­dus, in­clud­ing im­mi­grant work­ers from In­di­an states, af­ter New Del­hi end­ed the re­gion’s se­mi-au­ton­o­my in 2019 and dras­ti­cal­ly curbed dis­sent, civ­il lib­er­ties and me­dia free­doms.

Ten­sions have been sim­mer­ing as In­dia has in­ten­si­fied its coun­terin­sur­gency op­er­a­tions. But de­spite tourists flock­ing to Kash­mir in huge num­bers for its Hi­malayan foothills and ex­quis­ite­ly dec­o­rat­ed house­boats, they have not been tar­get­ed.

The re­gion has drawn mil­lions of vis­i­tors who en­joy a strange peace kept by ubiq­ui­tous se­cu­ri­ty check­points, ar­mored ve­hi­cles and pa­trolling sol­diers. New Del­hi has vig­or­ous­ly pushed tourism and claimed it as a sign of nor­mal­cy re­turn­ing.

The mead­ow in Pa­hal­gam is a pop­u­lar des­ti­na­tion, sur­round­ed by snow-capped moun­tains and dot­ted with pine forests. It is vis­it­ed by hun­dreds of tourists every day.

In­di­an op­po­si­tion leader Rahul Gand­hi, while con­demn­ing the at­tack, said Mo­di’s gov­ern­ment should take ac­count­abil­i­ty in­stead of mak­ing “hol­low claims on the sit­u­a­tion be­ing nor­mal” in the re­gion.

Mil­i­tants in the In­di­an-con­trolled por­tion of Kash­mir have been fight­ing New Del­hi’s rule since 1989. Many Mus­lim Kash­miris sup­port the rebels’ goal of unit­ing the ter­ri­to­ry, ei­ther un­der Pak­istani rule or as an in­de­pen­dent coun­try.

In­dia in­sists the Kash­mir mil­i­tan­cy is Pak­istan-spon­sored ter­ror­ism. Pak­istan de­nies the charge, and many Kash­miris con­sid­er it a le­git­i­mate free­dom strug­gle. Tens of thou­sands of civil­ians, rebels and gov­ern­ment forces have been killed in the con­flict.

In March 2000, at least 35 civil­ians were shot and killed in a south­ern vil­lage in Kash­mir while then-U.S. Pres­i­dent Bill Clin­ton was vis­it­ing In­dia. It was the re­gion’s dead­liest at­tack in the past cou­ple of decades.

Vi­o­lence has ebbed in re­cent times in the Kash­mir Val­ley, the heart of an­ti-In­dia re­bel­lion. Fight­ing be­tween gov­ern­ment forces and rebels has large­ly shift­ed to re­mote ar­eas of Jam­mu re­gion, in­clud­ing Ra­jouri, Poonch and Kathua, where In­di­an troops have faced dead­ly at­tacks.

SRI­NA­GAR, In­dia (AP)

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