Kashmir offers reward for car bomb leads

Srinagar, September 13: Police in Indian-ruled Kashmir have announced a 20,000-dollar reward for information on who was behind a car bomb that left four people dead and 15 others injured, officials said Sunday.

The attack in the region’s summer capital, Srinagar, late Saturday was one of the deadliest this year and the first car bomb blast in four years.

Police have blamed the attack, which hit a police bus, on Muslim militants fighting to end Indian rule in the scenic Himalayan region.

“Whoever provides information about the militants involved in the blast will be given a reward of one million rupees (20,000 dollars),” a police spokesman said in Srinagar.

No militant group has claimed responsibility for the explosion, which was heard up to five kilometres (three miles) away.

It was the first major blast in the region this year after a lull in violence by the Muslim-majority region’s insurgency, which according to official figures has left more than 47,000 people dead since it began in 1989.

The level of violence declined sharply after India and Pakistan, whose territorial dispute over Kashmir has triggered two wars, embarked on a peace process in 2004.

The peace process was suspended in the wake of the militant attacks last November on India’s financial capital Mumbai in which 166 people died.

—Agencies