Police in Indian Kashmir on Sunday detained at least 30 people protesting against alleged human rights violation by Indian security forces in the Himalayan region, police and witnesses said.
Over 300 members of the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front, most with black cloth covering their mouths, marched in Srinagar, Kashmir's capital, to mark International Human Rights Day.
"Atrocities in Jammu and Kashmir have increased rapidly despite the fake slogan of 'zero tolerance' by the prime minister of India," JKLF chairman Mohammad Yasin Malik said in an open letter to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
Earlier this year, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh vowed "zero tolerance" of misconduct and rights violations by troops.
The protesters - who carried placards that read "Oh! World conscience wake up, stop human rights violations in Jammu and Kashmir" - dispersed as police moved in.
Human Rights Watch reported in September Indian forces still carry out extra-judicial killings, torture and disappearances, while Muslim militants massacres civilians and kill politicians in a region torn by 17 years of anti-India revolt. India denies any systematic abuses in the region and says it punishes those found guilty.
The JKLF declared a ceasefire against Indian security forces in 1994 and wants independence both from India and Pakistan.
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