The
inquiry was ordered as protests against the incident continued for the
second day running in the region's northern district of Baramulla,
reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Baramulla's
deputy commissioner Naveen Chaudhary has ordered a magisterial inquiry
into the shooting incident," a government statement said, adding
the inquiry officer had been asked to prepare the report within 10 days.
More
than 1,000 villagers blocked the main highway north of the summer
capital Srinagar after Mohammed Sultan Malik was killed Friday, December
6, during a peaceful demonstration.
"Protests
against the alleged bombing and subsequent firing on protesters continue
for the second day running Saturday," a police officer told AFP.
He
said villagers had blockaded the highway at Churu, about 45 kilometers
(28 miles) north of Srinagar, the summer capital.
Muslims
had taken to the streets after a civilian house was bombed by the
soldiers for harboring Kashmiri independence seekers, said AFP.
The
owner told visiting reporters that his house was bombed because he had
lodged a protest against Indian army excesses in his village. But the
army claimed the house was damaged during what it described as an
anti-militancy operation.
Army
officials claimed that the soldiers were forced to fire into the crowd
when protesters tried to snatch their weapons.
Two
others injured in the firing are being treated in a hospital.
Residents
said the army version of events was a "cover-up" of the
"unwarranted firing" by the army on peaceful demonstrators.
Residents
want police to register a case against a battalion of Indian army's
counter-insurgency wing the National Rifles.
"Angry
Muslims raised anti-government slogans and squatted on the main
highway," an AFP photographer who witnessed the protest said.
He
said villagers had blockaded the highway at Churu, about 45 kilometers
(28 miles) north of Srinagar.
"The
traffic remains suspended since morning as people want action against
army personnel involved in the firing and the bombing," Abdul
Rashid, a resident of neighboring Sangrama highway village, told AFP,
adding that the situation was "tense."
Senior
police officers, including the district chief, rushed to the highway
village to try to calm the villagers.
They
assured the agitated villagers that anyone found guilty of wrongdoing
would be punished