Srinagar: Life returned to normal in Srinagar and other major towns of the Kashmir Valley Monday after seven days of curfew and two days of separatist-sponsored shutdown following the Feb 9 execution of parliament attack convict Afzal Guru.
Shops, banks, post offices, business establishments and government offices were open in the Jammu and Kashmir summer capital, while public transport was plying normally.
Students attended tuitions and coaching classes in the morning, as the city’s educational institutions have been closed for winter vacations.
Railway officials said train services in Jammu and Kashmir would resume by afternoon.
The curfew, imposed after the execution of Afzal Guru at Delhi’s Tihar Jail, was lifted in the entire Kashmir Valley Saturday. However, life remained paralysed for the next two days owing to a total shutdown called by Syed Ali Geelani, chairman of the hardline Hurriyat group.
Three people died across the region during clashes with the security forces in the aftermath of Guru’s hanging.
Meanwhile, rumours continue to do the rounds in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district and Srinagar city about the possibility of Afzal Guru’s body being returned to the family for last rites. However, there has been no official confirmation on this so far.
-IANS
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