Thousands throng funeral for 'youngest' mujahid martyred in Held Kashmir
Last updated on: 11 December,2018 04:12 pm
Mudasir Ahmad Parrey was martyred alongside two other mujahideen outside Srinagar on Sunday.
SRINAGAR (AFP) - Thousands of mourners thronged the funeral on Monday of a 14-year-old mujahid martyred by Indian troops in Kashmir, the youngest-ever mujahid martyred in the decades-long insurgency, police said.
Mudasir Ahmad Parrey was martyred alongside two other mujahideen, one a 17-year-old, outside the city of Srinagar on Sunday.
Parrey, a ninth-grade student, went missing in August before emerging in a photograph on social media brandishing an automatic assault rifle and military knife.
The young mujahids’ martyrdom sparked angry protests in the restive Himalayan region administered by India but also claimed in full by Pakistan.
A funeral procession Monday for the slain teenagers turned violent as mourners clashed with police, who used tear gas to drive them back.
Kashmiri mujahideen fighting for Kashmir’s independence or a merger with Pakistan have been warring with Indian troops in the disputed territory since the late 1980s.
The violence has left tens of thousands martyred, mostly civilians.
But this year has been the deadliest in a decade in Kashmir, with rights monitors saying more than 500 people have been martyred from armed conflict.
Many young men die fighting Indian troops but Parrey s death shocked even a region weary from years of bloodshed.
At 14, police said he was the youngest known mujahid to have died in the insurgency.
He was martyred in an 18-hour siege by Indian troops in Hajin, outside Srinagar. The home Parrey and the two other militants were holed up in was blasted to rubble.
"He had never failed in school exams," mourned his father, Rashid. The teenager also sometimes worked as a labourer to help out with family expenses, he added.
Many Kashmiris sympathise with the mujahideen fighting half a million Indian troops stationed in the heavily-militarised Muslim-majority region.
Civilians often pelt soldiers with stones while they are conducting search operations for mujahideen, and funerals for slain mujahideen draw thousands of mourners and see shops closed.
New Delhi has long accused Islamabad of stoking anti-India sentiment in the region and funding groups fighting in Kashmir.
Police believe the teenagers martyred in Sunday s fighting joined the mujahideen group around August. The third dead fighter is a Pakistani national, police say.
Pakistan says it only provides diplomatic support to the Kashmiri struggle for right to self-determination.