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Cinema opens in Kashmiri city after 14 years – but few turn up

A cinema in Srinagar has opened 14 years after the last picture house closed its doors.

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Kashmir cinema

A multi-screen cinema has opened in the main city of Indian-controlled Kashmir for the first time in 14 years.

The move in Srinagar comes as part of the government’s push to showcase normalcy in the disputed region that was brought under India’s direct rule three years ago.

Decades of deadly conflict, bombings and a brutal Indian counter-insurgency campaign have turned people away from cinemas, and only about a dozen viewers lined up for the first morning show, the Bollywood action movie Vikram Vedha.

People going to the cinema
A security guard frisks a Kashmiri at the entrance of Kashmir’s first multiplex cinema (AP)

The 520-seat hall with three screens opened under elaborate security in Srinagar’s high security zone that also houses India’s military regional headquarters.

“There are different viewpoints about (cinema) but I think it’s a good thing,” said moviegoer Faheem,
who gave only one name. “It’s a sign of progress.”

Others at the show declined to comment.

The afternoon and evening shows had less than 10% occupancy on Saturday, according to India’s premier movie booking website in.bookmyshow.com.

The multiplex was officially inaugurated on September 20 by Manoj Sinha, New Delhi’s top administrator in Kashmir.

The cinema is part of Indian multiplex chain Inox in partnership with a Kashmiri businessman.

Kashmir
A security guard checks the invitation of a Kashmiri journalist as a policeman stands guard near at the entrance of the cinema (AP)

After Kashmiri militants rose up against Indian rule in 1989, launching a bloody insurgency that was met with a brutal response by Indian troops, the once-thriving city of Srinagar wilted.

The city’s eight privately owned movie theatres closed on the orders of rebels, saying they were vehicles of India’s cultural invasion and anti-Islamic.

In the early 1990s, government forces converted most of the city’s cinemas into makeshift security camps, detention or interrogation centres.

Soon, places where audiences thronged to Bollywood blockbusters became feared buildings, where witnesses say torture was commonplace.

However, three cinema halls, backed by government financial assistance, reopened in 1999 amid an official push to project the idea that life had returned to normal in Kashmir.

Soon after, a bombing outside one hall in the heart of Srinagar killed a civilian and wounded many others, prompting its closure.

Official opening of the cinema
Manoj Sinha, Lieutenant Governor of Jammu and Kashmir, addresses the gathering after inaugurating the multiplex (AP)

Weary Kashmiris largely stayed away, and the other hall locked its doors within a year. One cinema, the Neelam, stuck it out until 2008.

Officials said the government is planning to establish cinemas in every district of the region, where tens of thousands have been killed in the armed conflict since 1989.

Last month, Mr Sinha also inaugurated two multi-purpose halls in the southern districts of Shopian and Pulwama, considered as hotbeds of armed rebellion.

“The government is committed to change perceptions about Jammu and Kashmir, and we know people want entertainment and they want to watch movies,” Mr Sinha told reporters at the inauguration.

In 2019, India revoked the region’s semi-autonomy and brought it under direct control, throwing Kashmir under a severe security and communication lockdown.

The region has remained on edge ever since as authorities also put in place a slew of new laws, which critics and many residents fear could change the region’s demographics.

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