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Kashmir grenade blast injures 10 as lockdown heads into 3rd month

Click to play video: 'Kashmir grenade blast injures 10 amid India lockdown'
Kashmir grenade blast injures 10 amid India lockdown
WATCH ABOVE: Kashmir grenade blast injures 10 amid Kashmir lockdown – Oct 5, 2019

A U.S. senator and a well-known Indian activist were barred from visiting Indian-administered Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan territory where at least 10 people were injured Saturday in a grenade blast as a government security and communications lockdown entered a third month.

Director General of Police Dilbagh Singh said the blast was caused by a “militant attack” and occurred near the office of a civil administrator in southern town of Anantnag.

He said that the injured included a police official and a journalist, and that all of the injuries were minor.

READ MORE: Authorities tighten restrictions in Indian Kashmir after speech by Pakistan’s PM

“It was a militant attack,” he said without elaborating. “Police are probing to identify and nab the culprit.”

No other details were immediately available.

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Since removing several constitutional provisions that gave the state of Jammu and Kashmir semi-autonomy in August, Indian authorities have flooded the Kashmir Valley, the heart of a decades-old armed insurgency against Indian rule, with thousands of additional troops.

Mobile internet and phone services have been snapped, and landline phone access remains spotty, disrupting daily life and business in the valley, home to about 7 million people. More than 2,000 people, including mainstream political leaders, are in jails around India or under house arrest.

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Trump says he’s ‘ready, willing and able’ to help arbitrate dispute between Pakistan and India over Kashmir

Ram Madhav, a senior leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party, the ruling Hindu nationalist party of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, said leaders under house arrest in Kashmir would be released soon, the Press Trust of India news agency reported.

“Prevention detention in five-star hotels with good facilities with TVs and books and all those things is a temporary measure to ensure law and order in the state,” PTI quoted Mahdav as saying.

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Sen. Chris Van Hollen, part of a U.S. congressional delegation visiting India on trade and other issues, told reporters Friday in New Delhi that the Indian government had denied his request to travel to Kashmir.

The Maryland Democrat said Washington was “closely monitoring the humanitarian situation” in Kashmir. The House Foreign Affairs Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing on human rights in South Asia later this month, and Kashmir is expected to be a focus.

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Sandeep Pandey, a well-known activist and education reformer, said he and other activists were barred from leaving the airport in Srinagar, the region’s main city, where they had travelled Friday for an informal fact-finding mission.

“We were held up and we don’t know what it was done,” Pandey said at a news conference Saturday in New Delhi.

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The district magistrate restricted him from travelling beyond the arrivals lounge, citing a law that limits public gatherings, according to a copy of the order.

The 54-year-old intended “to organize protests” against the constitutional changes in Kashmir, according to the order, a charge Pandey denied.

READ MORE: ‘A total blackout’: Kashmiri-Canadians unable to contact relatives since India cut internet

No foreign journalists have received permission from the Indian government to report in Kashmir since Aug. 5, although Indian citizens who work for foreign news organizations, including The Associated Press, have been able to report from the region.

The conflict over Kashmir began in late 1940s, when India and Pakistan won independence from the British Empire and began fighting over their rival claims.

A full-blown armed rebellion has raged in Indian-controlled Kashmir since 1989 seeking a united Kashmir — either under Pakistani rule or independent of both countries.

About 70,000 people have been killed in the uprising and an Indian military crackdown. India accuses Pakistan of training and arming the rebels, a charge Islamabad denies.

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