SRINAGAR: Massive anti-India protests and clashes erupted in Jammu &d Kashmir on Saturday after government forces in a gunbattle killed a prominent rebel commander and his associate in the disputed region.

Rebel leader Sabzar Ahmad Bhat and a fellow militant were killed after troops cordoned off the Tral area overnight following a tip-off that at least three rebels were hiding there, police said.

Police said the fighting was ongoing with at least one militant holed up in a house. As the violence raged, hundreds of angry residents chanting anti-India slogans marched in an attempt to help the trapped rebel escape.

Clashes between rock-throwing protesters and government forces erupted in different places in the area, with police and paramilitary soldiers firing shotgun pellets and tear gas to stop the protests.

As the news of the rebel leader’s killing spread in the region, thousands of people, including students, took to the streets shouting “Go India, go back” and “We want freedom.”

Many civilians were reported injured in the clashes.

Last year, similar massive protests followed by clashes roiled Kashmir following the killing of a charismatic rebel leader Burhan Wani. His death led to months of protests and security lockdown during which at least 90 people were killed and thousands injured, while hundreds among them were blinded and maimed in the firing of shotgun pellets by government forces.

Earlier Saturday, Indian soldiers killed six suspected rebels along the highly militarised de-facto border that divides the region of Kashmir between India and Pakistan, the army said.

The gunbattle erupted after a group of heavily armed militants crossed from the Pakistani-administered Kashmir into the Indian-administered part in western Rampur sector, said army spokesman Col. Rajesh Kalia.

On Friday, the army said soldiers killed two suspected militants in the same area after they crossed into the Indian-administered part of Kashmir from the Pakistani-held part.

There was no independent confirmation of the latest incidents.