One month since a lockdown was imposed in Kashmir, residents vow to resist New Delhi's move to scrap its special status.


Srinagar, Indian-administered Kashmir - Haleema had to begin her journey at dawn, travelling through deserted roads from her home in southern Kashmir's Shopian district and waited at a park outside the central jail in Srinagar, the main city in the Muslim-majority region.
Two hours past noon, Haleema was still waiting and uncertain if she would be allowed to meet her husband, Bashir Ahmad.
"He was picked 20 days ago," she said, "like they pick everyone else."
"They don't need a reason and we cannot ask questions," she said.
The memorial park outside the central jail has become a waiting zone for families who want to see their detained relatives.
The park is a memorial built for the protesters who were killed in 1931 as they rebelled against the Hindu king who later oversaw the accession of his Himalayan princedom to India, setting off a dispute that has lasted for decades.
The names of these protesters - who have been venerated as martyrs - are carved on a black marble slate at the park's entrance. Inside the park, a large graffiti slogan greets the tired visitors: "We will fight till the last breath".
Haleema said she wanted to see her husband. "I miss him. I don't know how long he will be jailed. Maybe a year, or two," she said, adding that she now has to take care of their four children.