Indian occupation forces shot dead three “stone-pelting” protesters, including a 16-year-old girl in Indian-held Kashmir (IHK) on Saturday, as tensions rose ahead of the anniversary of the death of a popular freedom fighter Burhan Wani. Witnesses said soldiers opened fire in the southern Kashmiri district of Kulgam after hundreds of people angry at an army search operation gathered to protest, some hurling objects. A government doctor told AFP that the dead included two men aged 20 and 22 years and a 16-year-old girl. “The three had bullet injuries and succumbed soon after their arrival at the hospital,” the doctor at a sub-district hospital in Kulgam said on condition of anonymity. Police chief SP Vaid confirmed the deaths but did not reveal any more details. The killings come on the eve of the second anniversary of the death of Burhan Wani, a charismatic 22-year-old freedom fighter killed by government forces two years ago on July 8. Separatist leaders have called for a shutdown on Sunday to commemorate the slain militant. Wani’s killing has triggered a sustained wave of violent protests that have so far claimed the lives of at least 100 civilians, with last year the deadliest in the region for the past decade. Thousands of others were injured by shotgun pellets fired by the Indian army. India has about 500,000 soldiers in valley, where innocent Kashmiris are calling for independence or a merger with Pakistan. Last month, the UN human rights chief released a report, calling for an investigation into alleged abuses perpetrated by Indian security forces in Held Kashmir. India rejected the report, blasting it as “fallacious” and “tendentious”. Published in Daily Times, July 8th 2018.