Police in Indian-occupied Kashmir said on Tuesday that they are investigating allegations from three families who say their relatives were killed by the military in a staged gunbattle and buried as unidentified militants.
Police are taking “all necessary steps to ascertain facts” in the case, said Amritpal Singh, the police chief in Shopian district, where the Indian army said the gunbattle took place on July 18.
The three young men aged 18, 21 and 25 years are cousins who their families say had gone to Shopian to work as labourers. They were last heard from on July 17.
On Sunday, the families said they were shown photographs that circulated on social media of three bodies that, according to the Indian army, were “unidentified terrorists” killed during the Shopian gunbattle.
They recognised the bodies as their missing relatives and filed a report with police.
“They had not even a remote connection with militancy," said Mohammed Yousuf, the father of one of the men.
He said his son last spoke to his wife on July 17 and from the next day the mobile phones of all three cousins were switched off.
He called for “a probe, verification of their call records and background checks” to prove their innocence.
A police statement on July 18 said soldiers killed three unidentified militants during a counterinsurgency operation in Shopian and buried their bodies in a remote graveyard.
An Indian army spokesman, Col Rajesh Kalia, said in a statement late on Monday that “the three terrorists killed during the operation have not been identified and the bodies were buried based on established protocols.” He said the army had "noted social media inputs linked to the operation at Shopian” and was investigating the matter.
The incident could further ratchet up anti-India anger in the disputed region, where Indian forces have repeatedly been accused of targeting civilians.
In 2010, a massive uprising erupted in occupied Kashmir after a police investigation found Indian soldiers had killed three civilians in a staged gunbattle and then claimed their victims were militants in order to claim a reward. The army responded by suspending two officers.
Rebel groups have fought since 1989 in occupied Kashmir and demand that the territory be united either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country.
A slew of emergency laws grant Indian forces in occupied Kashmir sweeping powers to search homes and make arrests without warrants and to shoot suspects on sight without fear of prosecution.