But thousands of mourners defied the security curbs Sunday to attended the burial of the commander in his hometown amid anti-India and pro-Independence slogans. Occupied Srinagar's central mosque remained shut and devotees were barred from offering prayers on the first day of the Ramadan fasting period. "Restrictions have been put in place in some areas to maintain law and order," police chief Shesh Pal Vaid told AFP.
Bhat, head of the Hizbul Mujahideen group, and a 16-year-old associate were killed in a gunfight near his native village in Tral area. A protester was shot dead by troops during clashes as hundreds of villagers tried to break the security cordon to help the freedom fighters to escape. Clashes spread to other districts, leaving dozens injured. Last year nearly 100 protesters were killed after Kashmiri leader Burhan Wani was killed, triggering months of anti-India protests. Bhat took over as the leader. "Forces have blocked all roads to restrict people to their areas," Bashir Ahmad, a resident of Pulwama told AFP, a neighbouring district of Tral. Authorities snapped internet mobile services and calling services Saturday just hours after a month-long ban on 22 social media sites like Facebook and Twitter ended.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017