
Five people were killed in India on Wednesday as police clashed with hundreds of protesters demanding greater autonomy in the Himalayan territory of Ladakh, leaving ‘dozens’ injured, police said.
In the main city of Leh, demonstrators torched a police vehicle and the offices of prime minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party, while officers fired tear gas and used batons to disperse crowds, police said.
‘Five deaths were reported after the protests,’ a police officer in Leh said. ‘The number of injured is in the dozens.’
Another police officer, Regzin Sangdup, said that ‘several people, including some policemen, were injured.’
Authorities later imposed restrictions on gatherings, banning assemblies of more than four people.
The sparsely populated, high-altitude desert region, home to some 3,00,000 people, borders both China and Pakistan.
Around half of Ladakh’s residents are Muslim and about 40 per cent are Buddhist.
It is classed as a ‘Union Territory’ — meaning that while it elects lawmakers to the national parliament, it is governed directly by New Delhi.
Wednesday’s demonstrations were organised in solidarity with prominent activist Sonam Wangchuk, who has been on hunger strike for two weeks.
He is demanding either full statehood for Ladakh or constitutional protections for its tribal communities, land and fragile environment.
‘Social unrest arises when you keep young people unemployed and deprive them of their democratic rights,’ Wangchuk said, in a statement posted on social media.
He appealed to people to avoid violence ‘whatever happens’.
India’s army maintains a large presence in Ladakh, which includes disputed border areas with China.
Troops from the two countries clashed there in 2020, leaving at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers dead.
Modi’s government split Ladakh off from Indian-administered Kashmir in 2019, imposing direct rule on both.
New Delhi has yet to fulfil its promise to include Ladakh in the ‘Sixth Schedule’ of India’s constitution, which allows people to make their own laws and policies.