Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
India

A 'Normal' Weekend In Kashmir After Nearly Four Months

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Nov, 2016 02:29 PM
    After 132 days of closure, the Kashmir Valley burst into life on Saturday morning with a large number of vehicles out on the roads, and markets, schools, offices and businesses open for the first time after months of separatist-sponsored shutdown and violent protests.
     
    Shoppers thronged Srinagar markets in large numbers even as demonetisation inconvenienced people in the Kashmir Valley where the November 8 surprise announcement had had little or no effect because businesses and other activities were closed since mid-July.
     
    Many buses and other public vehicles started plying early in the morning as people came out to attend their offices, open their shops and visit banks to withdraw cash.
     
    Separatist leaders, who had been spearheading the agitation with their weekly protest calendars, relaxed the shutdown for two days, asking people to resume normal activities over the weekend.
     
    Authorities also did not impose restrictions anywhere on Saturday to facilitate free movement of people and traffic.
     
    Many places in Srinagar and other district headquarters in the valley witnessed traffic jams as people came out in large numbers to go about their daily chores or simply to have a feel of normalcy.
     
    Muhammad Maqbool, 42, an electronics appliance store owner in Lal Chowk, is just happy to be at his shop during normal working hours, hoping to stay open till midnight.
     
    "I don't want to talk about my losses because that nobody is going to make good for me. Yet, the feeling that I have opened my shop first time during day hours after so long is great," Maqbool told IANS.
     
     
    He said he had briefly opened his store earlier when separatists announced evening relaxations. "Today is different. Everything is just normal."
     
    Some distance away, Ramzan Sheikh, 54, a shoeshine, said he made Rs 80 -- his "first earning" after all these months of violence. "I had four customers. Each one of them gave me Rs 20 for polishing shoes."
     
    Asked if he worked during the evening relaxation period, Sheikh said: "Who would want a shoe shine when the entire city was closed and on the run?"
     
    In north Kashmir's Ganderbal district, Sooda Mir and his son Muzaffar had a tough time starting their mini bus after all these days.
     
    "I had fixed a new battery in the vehicle before the trouble started here. I would also occasionally run the engine idle for some time during the 'hartal' to ensure that the battery did not run down. But, today the vehicle would just not start. I had to get a truck to pull-start my bus," said Muzaffar.
     
    Ironically, pavement vendors, wayside fruit sellers and roadside barbecue sellers have been better placed than other shopkeepers during the days of shutdown.
     
    "We have continued somehow with our business for the last two months by risking our lives. But it is better to die earning bread for one's family than seeing them starve to death," said Abdul Hameed, 42, who sells beddings on a pedestrian mall here.
     
     
    The stoic statement from Hameed is a terse reminder for those who believe life can be hostaged for too long either by the protest shutdowns or through curfews imposed by the authorities.
     
    Officials said attendance in government offices, banks and post offices was almost full for the first time since the unrest, which left nearly 100 persons dead, started a day after Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani was killed in a gunfight with security forces on July 8.
     
    Students appearing for the ongoing 10th and 12th class annual exams used public transport for the first time to reach the examination centres.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    3 Girls Found Semi-Conscious At Ambala Railway Station

    3 Girls Found Semi-Conscious At Ambala Railway Station
    Three minor girls from Jalandhar who had run away from their homes after getting poor marks in their school examination, were found semi-conscious at Ambala City railway station this morning, police said.

    3 Girls Found Semi-Conscious At Ambala Railway Station

    Arvind Kejriwal Wants To Become Punjab Cm, Couldn’t Strike Deal With Sidhu

    Arvind Kejriwal Wants To Become Punjab Cm, Couldn’t Strike Deal With Sidhu
    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Friday said Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal did not strike a deal with Navjot Singh Sidhu as the AAP Chief himself wanted to take over the coveted post in Punjab.

    Arvind Kejriwal Wants To Become Punjab Cm, Couldn’t Strike Deal With Sidhu

    Delhi-Mumbai Talgo Train: Final Speed Trial At 150 Kmph Today

    Delhi-Mumbai Talgo Train: Final Speed Trial At 150 Kmph Today
    The train will leave from New Delhi station at 2:45 p.m. and is scheduled to reach Mumbai at 2.29 a.m. early morning next day

    Delhi-Mumbai Talgo Train: Final Speed Trial At 150 Kmph Today

    Obsessed About Having Son, Jaipur Mother Stabs 4-Month-Old Baby Girl 17 Times

    Obsessed About Having Son, Jaipur Mother Stabs 4-Month-Old Baby Girl 17 Times
    A woman has been arrested for allegedly slitting her four-month-old daughter's throat and killing her in Rajasthan's Jaipurcity.

    Obsessed About Having Son, Jaipur Mother Stabs 4-Month-Old Baby Girl 17 Times

    Navjot Singh Sidhu's New Outfit 'B Team' Of RSS, Says Aam Aadmi Party

    Navjot Singh Sidhu's New Outfit 'B Team' Of RSS, Says Aam Aadmi Party
    AAP today hit back at Navjot Singh Sidhu, alleging that his political outfit 'Awaaz-e-Punjab' was the 'B-team' of the RSS, and said his attack on the Badal family was a diversion, as his real target was Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal.

    Navjot Singh Sidhu's New Outfit 'B Team' Of RSS, Says Aam Aadmi Party

    CBI Questions Jagdish Tytler In 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Case

      The move came after a special CBI court in July had given the agency a last chance to complete its probe in two months in the case against Mr Tytler.

    CBI Questions Jagdish Tytler In 1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Case