Shops reopen in Azad Kashmir after weeks of anti-government protests

Residents carry groceries as they cross a street at a marketplace after it re-opened in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir on June 29, 2026  (AFP)
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Updated 30 June 2026
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Shops reopen in Azad Kashmir after weeks of anti-government protests

  • Public transport partially resumes, with people saying they ran out of household necessities
  • Traders and workers say fuel shortages and Internet outages continue to hamper recovery

MUZAFFARABAD: Some shops reopened and public transport services partially resumed in Azad Kashmir on Tuesday following weeks of disruption caused by anti-government protests, though residents and traders said fuel shortages and Internet outages continued to hamper a return to normal life.

Supporters of the Joint Awami Action Committee (JAAC), an anti-government movement demanding economic and governance reforms, had pressed ahead with protests despite the group being banned this month under anti-terrorism laws. Protests, sit-ins and business strikes had paralyzed daily life across much of the region, according to officials and residents.

Despite the reopening of shops in the regional capital, Muzaffarabad, AFP observed limited activity at the city’s main bus terminal, which serves routes to Islamabad, while many businesses remained closed.

“Today, after several days, I was finally able to set up my fruit cart again,” fruit seller Muhammad Sulaman told AFP.




A general view of the bus terminal and marketplace after it re-opened in Muzaffarabad, the capital of Pakistan-administered Kashmir on June 29, 2026. (AFP)

“For the past eight days, my family had run out of flour, sugar and other basic household necessities. Today, I brought fruit from the wholesale market on credit so I could restart earning a living.”

Auto-rickshaw driver Rana Muhammad Ilyas said a shortage of fuel had left transport services struggling despite the easing of protests.

“The biggest problem right now is the lack of fuel,” he said. “With no petrol available, there are hardly any passengers, and business has come to a standstill.”

Local businessman Muhammad Fatah Yab said the prolonged shutdown had inflicted heavy financial losses on traders.

“Our businesses have been devastated,” he said. “Once a business is disrupted, it can take months or even years to recover.”

Gohar Kashmiri, senior vice chairman of the Central Traders Association, said between 200 and 400 shops had reopened across Muzaffarabad’s main commercial areas but urged authorities to restore fuel supplies and Internet services to enable business activity to resume fully.