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Record Hindu pilgrimage to Kashmir shrine
by Staff Writers
Srinagar, India (AFP) Aug 13, 2011

An annual pilgrimage to a Hindu cave shrine in restive Indian Kashmir came to an end Saturday with more than 600,000 pilgrims -- a record number -- having made the Himalayan trek, officials said.

Every year hundreds of thousands of pilgrims make the gruelling journey to the cave of Amarnath in the Kashmir Himalaya to look at a natural ice formation which is worshipped as a symbol of Shiva, the god of destruction.

The sacred phallic ice formation appears each year in the cave, which is one of Hinduism's top religious sites.

"The last batch of worshippers prayed at the shrine today thus marking an end to the pilgrimage," police officer Pervez Ahmed said, adding that India's top representative in Kashmir, state governor N.N. Vohra, was among them.

"Some 635,000 pilgrims visited the shrine which is a record," he said.

The pilgrimage, which draws Hindus from around the world to a site 3,800 metres (12,800 feet) above sea level, has been attacked in the past by Muslim rebels opposed to Indian rule in the region.

At least 32 pilgrims were killed in 2000, 10 more died the following year when militants opened fire, and there have been minor attacks in subsequent years.

Nonetheless Hindus came in large numbers as the Muslim-majority Kashmir valley has so far been largely peaceful this year, after three violent summers that left scores of anti-India protesters dead.

The pilgrims were not dissuaded despite high temperatures melting the ice stalagmite two weeks before the scheduled end of the pilgrimage.

In the first weeks of the pilgrimage, which started on June 29, devotees prayed before a 3.6-metre (12-foot) high formation, but by the end it had shrunk to a tiny stump.

"It was sad not to have a glimpse of a fully formed stalagmite but the shrine is equally important," said Ramesh Kumar from Mumbai, who made the trek with four friends.

A range of factors, from the body heat of thousands of pilgrims to global warming, have been cited as possible causes for the stalagmite's melting.

Meanwhile, police had to use batons to disperse scores of young men in the Indian Kashmir summer capital of Srinagar protesting against the arrest of a youth who had taken part in anti-India demonstration, police said.

The protesters forced a shutdown in Lal Chowk, the main commercial hub, and damaged several private and police cars.

Earlier, Indian soldiers recovered 43 kilograms of explosives on the outskirts of Srinagar, two days before India's Independence Day, the army said.

The anniversary is observed as "black day" by separatist politicians and rebels, who have staged attacks on the occasion in the past.

The insurgency, which erupted in 1989, has left nearly 40,000 people dead according to official statistics.




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China sends anti-terrorist unit to restive Xinjiang
Beijing (AFP) Aug 13, 2011 - China has deployed an elite police counter-terrorism unit to the restive northwest region of Xinjiang after a series of deadly attacks there, state media reported Saturday.

The Snow Leopard Commando unit is expected to carry out "anti-terrorist missions" in Kashgar and Hotan, which were hit by the recent violence, the China Daily newspaper quoted a spokesman for the region's police force as saying.

The unit is an elite counter-terrorism group under the People's Armed Force whose responsibilities include riot control and bomb disposal as well as reacting to hijacks.

The elite unit's presence in Xinjiang was to secure the region after last month's attacks and ahead of a trade convention next month, the police spokesman added, but did not give details of the size of the deployment.

Xinjiang has seen several outbreaks of ethnic violence in recent years as the mainly Muslim Uighur minority bridles under what it regards as oppression by the government and the unwanted immigration of ethnic Han Chinese.

Tensions boiled over again in July when two knife attacks as well as clashes between Uighurs and police killed more than 30 people in the resource-rich and strategically vital region.

Officials and state media have blamed the unrest on "terrorists" but some experts say the government has produced little evidence of an organised terrorist threat, adding the violence stems more from long-standing local resentment.

In July 2009, China was hit by its worst ethnic violence in decades when Uighurs savagely attacked Han Chinese in Urumqi -- an incident that led to deadly reprisals by Han on Uighurs several days later.

The government said around 200 people were killed and 1,700 injured in the 2009 violence.





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THE STANS
Afghan bomb kills five US troops
Kabul (AFP) Aug 11, 2011
Five American soldiers were killed by a bomb in Afghanistan Thursday, as the Taliban rejected claims that the fighters who shot down a US helicopter last week had perished in a NATO air strike. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said only that those killed in the blast in southern Afghanistan were the latest victims of the Taliban insurgency's increasing use of crude ... read more


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