Around the time Mohammad Sikander Bhat lay dying at home in Indian-occupied Kashmir's main city of Srinagar, Shafiq Ahmed was racing to get his pregnant wife to a hospital, negotiating about 85km (53 miles) of highways through a maze of heavily guarded checkpoints.
Amid severe movement restrictions and a total communications blockade, triggered by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's decision to withdraw special rights for the occupied Jammu and Kashmir region, one man perished without his last wish fulfilled: that of seeing his three daughters.
The other battled the odds, saved his wife, and became father to a son.
The death and the birth and both families' struggles reflect the human cost of the Indian government's harsh clampdown in the Kashmir valley, home to nearly seven million people.
For the first five days after India's move, parts of Srinagar had been turned into a fortress, blanketed with armed paramilitary and rolls of concertina wire blocking main streets. Anyone attempting to cross the checkpoints faced questions.