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  • 25
    Nov
    2011
    3:19pm, EST

    Dar Yasin / AP

    Local Kashmiri photographers Yawar Nazir, left, and Showket Shafi wait for treatment after they said they were assaulted by police and paramilitary forces during a protest in Srinagar, India, on Nov. 25. At least four journalists said they were assaulted by police and paramilitary forces Friday as they covered a protest in Indian-controlled Kashmir.

    Police accused of beating journalists in Indian-controlled Kashmir

    The AP reports from SRINAGAR, India:

    An Associated Press cameraman and at least three other journalists said they were assaulted by police and paramilitary forces Friday as they covered a protest in Indian-controlled Kashmir.

    Umar Meraj was beaten for several minutes by security forces using rifle butts, batons, fists and a barrage of kicks, according to Meraj and other witnesses.

    Local journalists have repeatedly complained of harassment and assaults by police in the tumultuous Himalayan territory. Continue reading.

    1 comment

    Police beat the journalists right here in the good ole U. S. of A ......So that doesn't suprise me much.....

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    Explore related topics: media, human-rights, india, kashmir, south-asia, world-news, srinagar
  • 17
    Nov
    2011
    7:37pm, EST

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    A Kashmiri woman collects fallen maple tree leaves near a chinar (maple) trees during autumn in Srinagar on Nov. 17, 2011. Trees are changing colors while the days become shorter as winter approaches in the Kashmiri summer capital of Srinagar. Indian Kashmir has registered a record number of tourists this year. This has been one of the successful tourist season after massive anti-India protests ruined the previous three tourist seasons.

    Fall color boosts tourism in Indian Kashmir

    Fall color slideshow.

    Comment

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  • 18
    Jul
    2011
    1:34pm, EDT

    Purple blast: Police spray demonstrators with dyed water in Srinagar

    Fayaz Kabli / Reuters

    A government employee tries to escape from dyed water sprayed by police to disperse a demonstration in Srinagar on Monday, July 18. Hundreds of demonstrators, some of whom were later arrested according to local reports, took to the streets to demand a pay rise.

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    Indian policemen are reflected in colored water used by a water cannon, as they use batons as they attempt to stop Kashmiri government employees during a protest in Srinagar on Monday.

    More Srinagar coverage on PhotoBlog here.

    Comment

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  • 11
    Mar
    2011
    11:35am, EST

    Rouf Bhat / AFP - Getty Images

    Supporters of The Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front carry torches during a candlelight protest in Srinagar, India, on Friday, Mar. 11. Indian security personnel detained Muhammad Yasin Malik and Chairman of People's Conference Party Bilal Gani Lone along with dozens of supporters during the rally held to protest mass arrests in the aftermath of anti-India protests in 2010.

    Protests in Srinagar - over police reaction to protests

    By Jonathan Woods, msnbc.com

    Over 100 people were killed during the five-month long wave of protests across the region in 2010.

    Comment

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  • 22
    Feb
    2011
    8:20am, EST

    Fishing on Dal Lake, Srinagar

    Fayaz Kabli / Reuters

    Fishermen cast their nets to catch fish from the waters of Dal Lake on a cold day in Srinagar, Kashmir on Feb. 22.

     

    Comment

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  • 16
    Feb
    2011
    7:52am, EST

    Thousands gather to see a hair from the Prophet Muhammad's beard

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    Kashmiri Muslims watch as an unseen priest shows a relic believed to be a hair from the beard of Prophet Muhammad at the Hazratbal Shrine in Srinagar on Feb. 16, on the occasion of Eid-e-Milad-un-Nabi, the birthday of Prophet Muhammad. Thousands of Kashmiri Muslims gathered at the shrine in the summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir to offer prayers on the Prophet's birth anniversary.

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    Kashmiri Muslim women watch as an unseen priest shows a relic believed to be a hair from the beard of Prophet Muhammad.

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    Kashmiri Muslim men watch as an unseen priest shows a relic believed to be a hair from the beard of Prophet Muhammad.

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    Kashmiri Muslim women watch as an unseen priest shows a relic believed to be a hair from the beard of Prophet Muhammad.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Indian news website sify.com reports:

    Thousands of people braved the cold and inclement weather Wednesday to offer prayers at Kashmir Valley's holiest Muslim shrine of Hazratbal in summer capital Srinagar to celebrate the birthday of Prophet Muhammad.

    Dressed in warm clothes, men, women and children converged at the shrine on the banks of the Dal Lake to have a glimpse of the Holy Relic (a hair of the Prophet's beard) after each namaz.

    'I have come from Kokernag village in Anantnag district. I have been regularly visiting the shrine on this day, since the age of 10 with my father,' said Muhammad Rajab, 72, who offered prayers here.

    'Today, I have brought my grandson and granddaughter to carry forward the family tradition,' he said.

    Rajab said he prayed for peace as his grand children's future depends on continued peace and normalcy in the Valley.

    'Unless there is peace, there would be no normalcy and unless there is normalcy my grandchildren cannot be educated properly. Thus, I prayed for peace, well-being and prosperity for my family in particular and the Muslim Umma in general,' he said.

    42 comments

      Muhammad, founder of Islam and author of Koran, was mentally sick psychopath, could not read and write. While in seizure, he uttered disjointed phrases, which his followers represented as Allah divine afflatus. This is the history of Islam that muslims and "honest and free" western media would no …

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    Explore related topics: religion, kashmir, south-asia, islam, world-news, prophet-muhammad, featured, crowd, srinagar, hazratbal, eid-e-milad-un-nabi
  • 11
    Feb
    2011
    4:04am, EST

    Strike in Kashmir shuts shops and businesses

    Mukhtar Khan / AP

    A Kashmiri child plays with a balloon as Indian paramilitary soldiers stand guard during a strike in Srinagar on Feb. 11. Shops and businesses were closed and road traffic was thin Friday across the Indian portion of Kashmir in response to a strike called by separatist groups to honor a pro-independence leader executed by India more than 25 years ago.

    Mukhtar Khan / AP

    Indian policemen detain activists from the Jammu Kashmir Democratic Liberation Party during a demonstration in Srinagar on Feb. 11 following a strike call by separatist groups.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

     AP reports:

    Friday's strike was called by separatists to honor Mohammad Maqbool Butt, the founder of the separatist Jammu-Kashmir Liberation Front. Butt was hanged in New Delhi's Tihar prison after a court found him guilty of killing an Indian intelligence officer and conspiring to kill an Indian diplomat, in Britain.

    Butt's family as well as separatist leaders have asked Indian authorities to hand over his remains for burial in the Himalayan region. The government has so far rejected the demand.

    1 comment

    A child's view of the Big Blue Marvel

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  • 14
    Jan
    2011
    8:34am, EST

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    An Indian Kashmiri woman rows a boat on Lake Dal during snowfall in Srinagar on Jan. 14. Most areas of northern India have ordered all schools to close until January 15, 2011 due to the cold weather.

    Rainbow ride: Woman rows a boat on Lake Dal in Srinagar, India

    2 comments

    Yes, it is a worthy Wild Art shot for sure.

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    Explore related topics: weather, india, cold, rainbow, srinagar
  • 7
    Jan
    2011
    4:36am, EST

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    A Kashmiri boatman rows a boat through fog on the partially frozen Dal Lake in Srinagar, Jan. 7. The Kashmir valley is experiencing extreme cold conditions with major parts of Dal Lake and hundreds of ponds, taps, water motors and drains frozen.

    Boat ride on partially frozen lake in Srinagar

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  • 6
    Jan
    2011
    11:42am, EST

    Danish Ismail / Reuters

    Kashmiri people taken pictures on the frozen Dal Lake in Srinagar, Jan. 6. A spell of cold weather has killed at least 23 people in north India in the last few days, most of them homeless, as temperatures dip close to freezing point, local media reported.

    Making the best of a bad situation: Cold weather and icy winds kills dozens in northern India

    By Elena Grothe

    We posted some photos earlier today of India's cold weather impacting the homeless. The AP reports:

    LUCKNOW, India (AP) -- Near-freezing temperatures and icy Himalayan winds have killed dozens of people in northern India over the past two weeks and forced schools to close in the capital, officials said Wednesday.

    A spokesman for worst-hit Uttar Pradesh state said five people died from the cold overnight, pushing the number of deaths there to 41.

    Uttar Pradesh is one of India's poorest states and nearly a fifth of its 180 million people are homeless.

    In New Delhi, at least 10 homeless people died from the cold weather over the past two weeks despite a drive by police and welfare officials to persuade people living on the streets to sleep in 80 city-run shelters.

    The temperature dropped to 3.7 degrees Celsius (38.6 degrees Fahrenheit) on Tuesday in the capital, where the average January temperature is about 14 C (58 F).

    Arvinder Singh Lovely, New Delhi's education minister, ordered all schools to close for a week Wednesday because of the intense cold.

    Officials in the eastern state of Bihar also closed schools for a week.

    Though India is famous for its brutally hot summers, temperatures fall sharply for a few weeks in December and January. Poor people, particularly those living on the streets, are the worst hit.

    "We burn bonfires and sit around them almost the whole night," said Sukhai Ram, a laborer in Lucknow. Wrapped in a thin shawl, he tried to keep the fire going by adding bits of rubber tire and plastic bags. "Without this fire we will die."

    Authorities in Lucknow arranged 74 bonfires at major road crossings, hospitals, and bus and railway stations to keep people from dying from the cold, Mayor Dinesh Sharma said.

    2 comments

    I could handle -3 celcius, but alas..........................too many draft dodgers, creating far too much yellow snow.

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  • 14
    Dec
    2010
    12:40pm, EST

    Kids and adults cut themselves in India

    Mukhtar Khan / AP

    A Kashmiri Shiite Muslim boy bleeds as he flagellates himself during a Muharram procession in Srinagar, India, on Tuesday, Dec. 14.

    Fayaz Kabli / Reuters

    Volunteers and fellow mourners carry a Kashmiri Shi'ite man after he fainted while flagellating himself with a knife during Muharram procession in Srinagar, India on Dec. 14. Muslims all over the world mourn the slaying of Imam Hussein, grandson of Prophet Mohammad, during the first ten days of the Islamic month of Muharram. Imam Hussein was killed by his political rivals along with 72 companions in the 7th century battle of Kerbala.

    6 comments

    Horrible !!!!!

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    Explore related topics: india, mourning, srinagar, muharram, jwoods
  • 24
    Nov
    2010
    11:29am, EST

    Altaf Qadri / AP

    Abdul Rehman Bhat, caretaker of a Muslim shrine, pours tea in a traditional cup for visitors inside the community kitchen at Peer Ki Gali about 62 miles from Srinagar, India, Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2010.

    Kitchen in India

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    Sometimes a lack of light makes a good picture.

    Comment

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Jonathan Woods

Jonathan Woods worked for msnbc.com for three years, ending in 2012. For six years prior he worked as a photojournalist and multimedia producer for four newspapers across the U.S., including the Rocky Mountain News in Denver. Woods earned his B.A. in photojournalism from Western Kentucky University. He is now working for TIME Magazine, leading a team of picture editors online for TIME.com.

  • Follow me on Twitter
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David R Arnott

is NBCNews.com's Multimedia Editor in London.

Elena Grothe

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com

Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

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