Violence and censorship rife among citizens and the media, as push to reclaim state land belies Indian government’s claims of peace in disputed region

Suhail Ahmad Shah stood despairingly before the wreckage that for two decades had been his livelihood. Just hours before, he had been busy at the workshop when he heard an ominous crunch above him and the tin roof began to cave in. He barely made his escape before a bulldozer flattened the entire place.

“No notice was served to us,” said Shah, 38. “The officials came suddenly and demolished our workshop. No one is listening to us. We’ve been paying rent. Isn’t this an atrocity? They have snatched our livelihood.”

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Madeleine McCann: a reporter looks back on a 16-year mystery that never left the front pages

Guardian journalist who was in Praia da Luz at the time reflects…

Manchester looks for silver linings on grey day after England defeat

Mixture of disappointment at result, pride in players and disgust at abuse…

Charities call on NHS England to bring back Covid precautions for staff

As virus cases rise by 30% in the past week, the clinically…

Man charged over London hospital stabbings

Matteo Bottarelli accused of three counts of attempted murder over incident at…