New Delhi Rights Commission Registers Case After Dangerous Assaults and Economic Boycotts Force Kashmiri Traders and Students Out of Indian States

New Delhi Rights Commission Registers Case After Dangerous Assaults and Economic Boycotts Force Kashmiri Traders and Students Out of Indian States

June 14, 2026 Off By Sharp Media

The New Delhi Human Rights Commission finally took notice of the violent harassment against Kashmiri shawl sellers and students across India. For decades, these traders travelled during winter to sell crafts, building economic links between the valley and Indian states. Hundreds of young people also leave home annually to study in various Indian universities for a better future. However, a shocking rise in targeted physical violence and open discrimination now threatens their daily survival and safety. By registering a formal case following the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association complaint, the commission has admitted that these are organized attacks of hatred.

Violent Mobs Launch Coordinated Physical Attacks and Economic Boycotts in Northern Towns

The official complaint details a highly dangerous pattern of targeted violence across Himachal Pradesh, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Delhi, Maharashtra, and Uttar Pradesh. Local extremist groups and aggressive mobs constantly target Kashmiri shawl sellers who travel alone through residential neighborhoods. These poor vendors face brutal physical beatings, public humiliation, and verbal abuse meant to destroy their trade. In several states, local mobs openly threatened traders and forced them to flee towns where they worked peacefully for years. This dangerous intimidation aims to enforce a total economic boycott against Kashmiri Muslims by destroying their livelihoods.

Extreme Campus Discrimination and Constant Threats Force Kashmiri Students Into Hiding

This toxic environment makes life miserable for Kashmiri students trying to get an education in Indian cities. Landlords routinely deny them hostel rooms and rental housing simply because of their regional and religious identity. On campus, these students face severe communal profiling, constant bullying, and direct physical threats from radical student groups. Whenever political tensions rise, innocent Kashmiri students face collective blame and violent revenge, which completely disrupts their education. This extreme atmosphere of fear makes it impossible for young Kashmiris to study safely or live without constant terror.

Rising Numbers Prove the Complete Failure of Local Police to Protect Minorities

Independent human rights groups and media monitors confirm that hate crimes against Kashmiris have spiked massively over recent years. Reports by Amnesty International show that hundreds of students had to abandon their colleges in Punjab and Haryana to save their lives. Dozens of violent attacks on traders occur every single year, yet local police forces routinely refuse to file cases. This complete failure of the justice system gives attackers free rein to assault Kashmiris without fearing any legal punishment.

Aggressive Extemist Groups Destroy Ancient Cultural Links and Interdependent Trade Ties

Kashmiri shawl sellers have been an important part of the regional economic landscape for generations. These traditional vendors walk miles carrying textiles on their backs, maintaining deep relationships of trust with local families. Middle class households in Uttar Pradesh and Punjab have bought winter clothing from the same Kashmiri traders for decades. By launching violent attacks, extremist groups are destroying the income of poor artisans in IIOJK and breaking ancient cultural ties.

Toxic Television Channels and Aggressive Social Media Campaigns Fuel Street Violence

The main driving force behind this public hatred is the non-stop negative portrayal of Kashmiris by mainstream television media. Many aggressive news channels and online platforms openly profile the entire population of IIOJK as dangerous and untrustworthy. This toxic media propaganda poisons the minds of ordinary citizens and turns local communities against hardworking vendors and students. Local political groups exploit this suspicion, transforming media lies into real physical violence against innocent people on the streets.

State Law Enforcement Violates Constitutional Rights and International Legal Commitments

The systematic harassment of Kashmiri citizens is a direct violation of the Indian Constitution and international human rights laws. The constitution guarantees every citizen the fundamental right to move freely and conduct business anywhere in the country. These violent actions also breach international covenants that order states to protect minorities from discrimination and physical harm. The commission must issue strict directives to stop state governments from ignoring these clear constitutional violations.

State Administrations Must Stop Hate Crimes and Hold Violent Perpetrators Accountable

The extreme insecurity facing Kashmiri traders and students across India is a major crisis requiring immediate government intervention. Local police forces must do their duty and protect vulnerable citizens from identity-based violence and forced expulsions. The Human Rights Commission must ensure a fast investigation so that every attacker faces strict criminal punishment. True peace is impossible under tyranny, and the state must act immediately to stop this targeted lawlessness.