Kashmir residents face medicine shortage as deadly clashes flare

Indian Kashmir residents said Tuesday they are facing shortages of prescription drugs, as parts of the region remained under curfew for an 11th day following deadly clashes between protesters and security forces. Indian soldiers fired on a stone-throwing crowd defying a curfew, killing three people on Tuesday.

Some miscreants then tried to snatch weapons from the army and tried to set vehicles on fire,” a police spokesman said.
The army opened fire after the protesters refused to heed warnings and two women were killed, the spokesman said.
A third person died in hospital on Tuesday.
As the overall death toll from days of violence rose to 45, shopkeepers warned supplies were running low because trucks were unable to reach them, while residents complained of being “caged” in their homes.
“People are suffering without medicines. A lot of people are struggling for medicines for diabetes, hypertension and anti-depressants,” said Nazir Ahmed who owns a pharmacy in the old part of the main city of Srinagar.
With most vehicles ordered off the roads under the curfew, Ahmed said he walked five kilometers to a warehouse to buy medicines.
“No fresh supplies are coming from outside. This will last two to three days for my neighborhood,” Ahmed said, carrying plastic bags full of drugs. Shops and other businesses have been shuttered under the curfew which the government says is needed to curb the street clashes that erupted after the death of a popular rebel leader on July 8.
In parts of Srinagar Tuesday, residents kept watch for volunteers from local charities delivering supplies including food on foot.
An elderly woman suffering from hypertension and a heart condition said she hoped they would bring medicines soon.
“I don’t have my medicines. Some volunteers came but they did not have the medicines I need,” Noora, 80, who uses one name, said from her doorstep.
“We are just caged inside our home,” her son, Ghulam Nabi Ahangar, added.
Ahangar said security forces were firing tear gas and pepper spray at night to deter people from venturing outside.
“The poisonous gases stay inside our home and lungs the whole night. Our children are falling sick and cannot sleep,” Ahangar told AFP.
Some pharmacies outside hospitals are open but few residents can reach them, while Internet and phone services remain patchy.

Source: Arab News