Kashmir hopes for a voice for its woes after election

As elections are held after a 10-year gap, people in Kashmir say they have waited long to be heard.

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The former state of Jammu and Kashmir - now divided into two federally administered territories - is holding its first assembly election in a decade. The third and last phase of voting is on Tuesday and results will be declared on 8 October.

Since the 1990s, an armed separatist insurgency against Indian rule in the region has claimed thousands of lives, including those of civilians and security forces.

Earlier, elections were marred by violence and boycotts as separatists saw polls as a means for Delhi to try and legitimise its control. The high voter turnout now signals a change - people here say they have waited long to be heard.

“The level of poverty in our area is severe,” says 52-year-old Mohammad Yusuf Ganai after casting his vote. He laments that the lack of jobs has forced educated young Kashmiris to "sit at home".

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx20rr57g16o


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