Curfew-bound Kashmir Valley schools reopen after three months
Srinagar: After remaining shut for three months, schools has reopened in violence-hit Kashmir Valley. The state government had on Sunday directed staff at schools to be
present in their establishments, a day after the Centre asked the Jammu and Kashmir Government to reopen schools as part of an eight-point peace package for the Valley. Transport is being provided to both teachers and students on eleven
important routes in Srinagar. Exams for Class 10 and Class 12 are to start in the last
week of October and first week of November, respectively. Over 3.25 lakh students
are registered with the Jammu and Kashmir Board of School Education for
secondary and senior secondary classes. Meanwhile, the hardline faction of the
separatist All Parties Hurriyat Conference gave a shutdown call for Monday and
appealed to students and parents not to cooperate with the government's directive.
Hardline separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani said that students had suffered the
most during the ongoing unrest in the Valley. The fortnight-long curfew lifted from five
districts of the Valley on Sunday. Curfew was lifted from Anantnag, Pulwama,
Kulgam, Shopian and Budgam districts in South and Central Kashmir and Handwara
town in Kupwara district of north Kashmir. However, restrictions under Section 144
of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC), which prohibits the assembly of four or
more persons, continue to remain in place in Budgam district. The recent eruption of
violence has left the government searching for a new strategy for dealing with the
protests. At least 93 people have died in the last three months. The Kashmir Valley
has also been subjected to a series of shutdowns and frequent curfews during this
period.