Curfew imposed in Kashmir after Indian army fire kills 3

SRINAGAR: Indian authorities on Wednesday imposed a curfew in parts of Kashmir to stop fresh anti-India demonstrations following the killings of three people by Indian troops and a general strike called by separatists.

Shops and schools were closed and streets deserted as government forces patrolled the curfew-bound areas of Srinagar, Handwara and neighborhoods.

Police said a 70-year-old woman, who was hit by gunfire and was among a dozen injured during massive clashes between residents and government forces on Tuesday, died in a hospital Wednesday. Two others also died from army gunfire.

The protest and clashes in northern town of Handwara erupted Tuesday following an allegation by residents that an Indian army soldier tried to sexually assault a teenage schoolgirl in Handwara. The army ordered an investigation.

Police Inspector-General Syed Javaid Mujtaba Gillani said the soldiers fired at protesters when they tried to torch their bunker.

Shortly after the woman's burial, clashes erupted as villagers defied the curfew and hurled rocks at government forces who responded by firing tear gas.

"She was working in her orchard 4 kilometres (2 miles) away from the protest site. The soldiers came and shot her. It's a plain murder," said villager Ghulam Mohammed Shah.

Later Wednesday, hundreds joined the funeral of two young men and shouted "Go India, go back" and "We want freedom."

Anti-India sentiment runs deep among the mostly Muslim population of Kashmir and human rights groups have long accused the Indian military of using rape and sexual molestation to oppress the local population.

Kashmir has been split between Indian and Pakistani control since the British colonialists left in 1947, but claimed in full by both.

Rebel groups have been fighting since 1989 for independence from India or the Indian portion's merger with Pakistan. More than 68,000 people, most of them civilians, have been killed in the armed uprising and subsequent Indian crackdown.