
India's government confined a huge number of individuals in front of a questionable move to strip the territory of Jammu and Kashmir of its semi-independent status on 5 August 2019. After one year, a significant number of them have been accused of genuine offenses are as yet moping in correctional facilities across India. BBC Hindi's Majid Jahangir reports.
Tasleema Wani and her family were sleeping soundly the evening of 6 August when there was a noisy hitting into the entryway.
It was the day after the Indian government in Delhi dazed the nation by disavowing a protected arrangement that gave Jammu and Kashmir exceptional forces. The choice split the piece of the contested area that India manages into two government domains, and saw a phenomenal check in time and correspondences lockdown forced.
"It was a group of joint security powers from the military and police and they were shouting for us to open the entryway. It was alarming," Ms Wani said.
"They sent me inside, and took both my children outside to the garden and interrogated them for regarding 15 minutes. At that point they left."
Be that as it may, they later returned and asked her senior child, 19-year-old Nadeem, to show them the path to a neighbor's home. That was the last time Ms Wani saw him.
He was taken to a police headquarters, kept and inevitably moved to a prison in Uttar Pradesh state, more than 1,000km (620 miles) away.
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