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Updated: Aug 07, 2016 20:09 IST

Outside the grand mosque in the sensitive Nowhatta area of Srinagar, an old couple is stopped by a CRPF jawan. “Where are you going? It’s curfew.” The old man pulls out a prescription from his pocket as his wife looks on. “It’s for a medical reason. Please let us go,” he begs. The jawan eventually relents.

Few kilometers away, on another day, a 30-year-old press photographer’s two-wheeler is stopped by an irate mob which wants to ensure the shutdown called by separatists is followed.

“Whoever you are, journalist or not, go back home,” a protestor in his early twenties tells him, while another punctures the bike’s tyres.

In the last 30 days, since militant commander Burhan Wani was killed in an encounter, Srinagar has been caught between a curfew imposed by authorities – to maintain law and order – and the call for shutdown – as a means of protest – by separatists.

Read | Curfew, separatist shutdown cripple Kashmir for 30th day

Between the two, and at least 56 deaths later, normal life in Srinagar and elsewhere in the Valley has been in disarray. Srinagar has turned into a garrison town with frequent clashes between stone throwing protesters and security forces.

If found out on the streets, anyone can be pulled up Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) or police personnel for violating curfew.

“The government crackdown on civilians occurred right after Burhan Wani’s death. Since then, people have not been able to even get out and meet community members and discuss the ongoing crisis. Many people wanting to go to hospitals to help the injured weren’t allowed to move. Moreover, people could not communicate with each other because of the clampdown on phone services,” said Irfan Mehraj, a social activist who lives in the sensitive old city area of Srinagar.

A journalist from the old city area said, “I fear two things as I come out for work. First, confrontation with a jawan and second, getting caught in a clash between stone pelters and the forces.”

Paramilitary soldiers stand guard during curfew in Srinagar, on August 5, 2016. Locals say people are more willing to adhere to the separatists call for shutdown than government-imposed curfew. (Waseem Andrabi /HT Photo)

For the ordinary Kashmiri without a broadband connection, television is the only source of entertainment and breaking news. In some areas of Srinagar, people come out after sundown in their alleys and meet. Others gather outside mosques after the evening prayers and discuss the ongoing turmoil.

Grocery stores, vegetable shops and petrol pumps usually remain shuttered throughout the day, only to open clandestinely at unearthly hours – late nights or early mornings. In some areas where shopkeepers dared to open during the day, they had to face the wrath of ‘motorcycle gangs’ – youth who came on bikes and forced them to shut down.

Read | Kashmir’s disturbing new reality

The salaried class have not been hit that hard by the current unrest, but the economy has been badly affected with losses for businesses, shops and the tourism sector estimated to be huge.

Mushtaq Ahmad Wani, president of the Kashmir chamber of commerce and industry said that for most businessmen shutting down shop this time is a way of protest against the killings of civilians and the use of pellet guns by security forces. According to Wani, businessmen have downed their shutters regardless of losses.

But despite the shutdown, families that Hindustan Times spoke to said that the supplies of essentials were not affected because the small grocery stores in the narrow alleys opened regularly and also because Kashmiris have a habit of stocking up basic food items keeping in mind the frequent lockdowns and inclement weather. They added that people in the villages have a steady supply of rice and vegetables.

A Kashmiri man walks past closed shops painted with graffiti during a curfew in central Srinagar on July 11, 2016. Forced indoors by the curfew and shutdown, graffiti has increasingly been used by protesters to register their ire against the situation. (AP Photo)

Petrol was sold in the black market in the initial days of the shutdown, but gradually some fuel station owners began opening their stations after midnight or whenever the separatists called for ‘relaxation’.

Journalists move around on government-issued ‘curfew passes’.

Srinagar’s streets have mostly been deserted. Walls have become a canvass for anti-India graffiti. And without tourists, the Dal Lake has been quiet with the shikaras moored at the jetties.

The curfew and shutdowns have taken a toll on weddings with hundreds of them cancelled. Families with relatives in south Kashmir where communication remained completely snapped for 18 days from July 8, spent sleepless nights worrying about their kin.

Senior journalist Sheikh Mushtaq points out, is that “curfew is bitterer” than the separatists’ “call for shutdown” because state is “quite violent” while many follow the separatist-issued shutdown willingly.

Paramilitary soldiers check the identity card of a local man on August 2, 2016. Walking around Srinagar has become near impossible with security forces and youths on motorbikes constantly checking on people found outdoors and shops operating their businesses. (Waseem Andrabi / HT Photo)

“But even when the Hurriyat announces relaxation in shutdown and people try to follow that, the police does not allow that at many places because that will be seen as civil disobedience,” Mushtaq adds.

In Srinagar’s neighbouring towns and villages where intense anti-govt protests have become a daily staple, residents say that they have started forming communities to take care of the essentials like food or medicines that the area requires.

“In many parts of south Kashmir, it appears that the areas are controlled by youths and residents. Protests and clashes with security forces are frequent. Everything is shut and people are angry,” said a student from Kulgam town.

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