Some main Muharram processions have been banned in Indian-administered Kashmir since armed rebellion broke out in 1989.
Police have detained dozens of people in Indian-administered Kashmir as they dispersed Shia Muslims who attempted to participate in processions marking the Muslim month of Muharram.
Dozens of Muslims defied severe security restrictions in parts of the main city of Srinagar and took to the streets chanting religious slogans. The restrictions include a ban on the Shia religious procession.
Muharram is among the holiest months for Muslims across the world and includes large processions of mourners beating their chests while reciting elegies and chanting slogans to mourn the death of Prophet Muhammad’s grandson Hussein and 72 companions in the battle of Karbala in present-day Iraq.
Sunday’s procession marked the eighth day of Muharram, two days before its peak on the day of Ashura.
In 2020, dozens were injured as Indian forces fired shotgun pellets and tear gas to disperse the procession.
Some main Muharram processions have been banned in Kashmir since an armed rebellion broke out in 1989 demanding the region’s independence from India or its merger with neighboring Pakistan.
Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels, and government forces have been killed in the conflict.
Kashmiri Muslims have long complained that the government is curbing their religious freedom on the pretext of maintaining law and order while promoting an annual Hindu pilgrimage to the Amarnath Shrine in a Himalayan cave that draws hundreds of thousands of visitors.
Agencies