'They're marauding our homes like a victorious army': Kashmiris accuse Indian troops of beatings, abuse
The Indian soldiers descended on Bashir Ahmed Dar's house in the south of occupied Kashmir on August 10, a few days after the government in New Delhi stripped Kashmiris of the special autonomy they had for seven decades through a rushed presidential order and launched a crackdown.
Over the next 48 hours, the 50-year-old plumber said he was subjected to two separate rounds of beatings by soldiers.
They demanded that he find his younger brother, who had joined Kashmiris opposing India's presence in the Muslim majority region, and persuade him to surrender or else "face the music".
In the second beating, at a military camp, Dar said he was struck with sticks by three soldiers until he was unconscious.
He woke up at home, "unable to sit on my bruised and bloodied buttocks and aching back," he added.
But it wasn't over.
On August 14, soldiers returned to his house in the village of Heff Shirmal and destroyed his family's supply of rice and other foodstuffs by mixing it with fertiliser and kerosene.
Dar's account of violence and intimidation by Indian soldiers was not unusual.
Read: Stories of torture following annexation by India emerge from occupied Kashmir
In more than 50 interviews, residents in a dozen villages in occupied Kashmir told The Associated Press that the military had raided their homes since India's government imposed a security crackdown in the region on August 5.
They said the soldiers inflicted beatings and electric shocks, forced them to eat dirt or drink filthy water, poisoned their food supplies or killed livestock, and threatened to take away and marry their female relatives. Thousands of young men have been arrested.
Asked by AP to respond to the recent allegations of abuse from the Northern Command, the Indian army's headquarters in occupied Jammu and Kashmir, its spokesman based in Srinagar, Col Rajesh Kalia, dismissed the villagers' accounts as "completely baseless and false", and asserted the Indian army values human rights.
"There have been reports of movement of terrorists" in the areas AP visited, Kalia said. "Some youth were suspected to be involved in anti-national and disruptive activities and were handed over to police as per law of the land."
India's top security official, National Security Adviser Ajit Doval, said the army has not been involved in the operation in Kashmir.
"There have been no atrocities," he said.