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Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs penchant for surprise decisions has shocked Indians before. But [nothing prepared]( the nation for his move to abolish Kashmirâs seven-decade-long autonomy â sneaked in among routine parliamentary discussions.
Still, there were warning signs.
Indiaâs only Muslim-majority state had been tense for more than a week. As many as 10,000 extra troops were deployed to the already [heavily militarized]( region, and tourists and pilgrims visiting the famous cave temple of the Hindu God Shiva were abruptly asked to leave. Two former chief ministers were placed under house arrest hours before the announcement.
Long an aim of Modiâs ruling Hindu nationalist party, analysts say U.S. President Donald Trumpâs recent offer to mediate in the [India-Pakistan dispute]( â rebuffed by India â may have pushed the premier to rush his Kashmir decision.
The move has enhanced Modiâs [strongman]( image and redefined the boundaries of Indian democracy. It also lays the ground for deepening conflict with Pakistan â the nuclear-armed neighbors have fought two wars over Kashmir and both claim the region â and may intensify religious divides in the rest of India where violence against minorities is rising. Pakistan has launched a diplomatic offensive against Indiaâs move, calling on global powers to sanction New Delhi.
No one knows what Kashmiris think of the change. That will only emerge after restrictions on communication and movement in the restive state are lifted.
â [Archana Chaudhary](Â
A paramilitary trooper stands guard in Srinagar. India's dominant presence in the valley is seen by many Kashmiris as crushing even the symbolic autonomy they once had.
Photographer: Tauseef Mustafa/AFP/Getty Images
Global Headlines
[Losing the suburbs]( | After two gruesome mass shootings in the U.S. within 24 hours, some Republicans are raising alarms that their opposition to new firearm limits is making the party toxic to the suburban women and college graduates who will shape the 2020 election.Â
- Democratic presidential hopeful [Cory Booker]( will speak on gun violence and white nationalism at a Charleston church where a white extremist killed nine black congregants in 2015.
- The U.S. Supreme Court is [weighing]( whether to go forward with a Second Amendment showdown for the first time in a decade.
[Currency clash]( | China moved to limit weakness in the yuan, providing some stability to markets, after the Trump administration [formally labeled it]( a currency manipulator, escalating its trade war with Beijing. While the potential penalties are less punitive than the steps Trump has already taken, the move underscores how rapidly relations between the worldâs two largest economies are deteriorating. China denied itâs a currency manipulator, saying markets determined the yuanâs recent slide.
- Itâs [far from certain]( whether the yuanâs slump will give Trump what he seems to covet â a weaker dollar.
- Subscribe to Bloombergâs [Terms of Trade]( newsletter to receive all the big developments in your inbox each weekday.
[Powered up]( | Matteo Salvini, Italyâs de facto leader, tightened his grip on the government after parliament passed laws granting him more powers to curb immigration despite grumblings from his coalition partners. Salvini, whose League party is soaring in the polls, seems to have shelved plans to quit the government and force early elections, at least for now. But heâs always in campaign mode: Heâs starting a series of rallies on Italyâs beaches.
[Luring Britain]( | Trump is looking to use the U.K.âs split with the European Union to lure Prime Minister Boris Johnson to his side on policy issues from isolating Iran to blocking Chinese tech giant Huawei, [David Wainer]( reports. Johnsonâs desire for a post-Brexit trade deal with the U.S. gives Trump leverage at a time when Britainâs European partners are growing wary of his intentions.
- Subscribe to [Brexit Bulletin]( to stay on top of the divorce talks.
[Mexico confusion]( | Eight months into his six-year term, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador has left business leaders in a state of investment paralysis. Executives interviewed on a recent trip to the capital described a struggle to navigate the leftist leaderâs policies and abrupt pronouncements, often calling decision-making process âerratic.â
What to Watch
- Nigeriaâs government must decide whether to [comply with a high court ruling]( to release ailing Shiite leader Ibrahim el-Zakzaky, whose arrest four years ago sparked protests in which dozens of people have died.
- North Koreaâs foreign ministry [renewed its threat]( to take a ânew roadâ in negotiations with the U.S., a sign that talks may on the edge of collapse six weeks after Trumpâs historic meeting with Kim Jong Un at the DMZ.
- Puerto Ricoâs roiling political crisis has entered a [new phase](, with the U.S. territoryâs top court agreeing to consider whether freshly sworn-in Governor Pedro Pierluisi assumed the office legally.
[And finally]( ⦠A decades-old dream of building the worldâs biggest hydroelectric project to power energy-hungry African nations may be inching closer to reality, thanks to the involvement of consortia from China and Spain. But thereâs a catch â itâs in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a country two-thirds the size of Western Europe thatâs one of the most difficult places on Earth to get anything done. [Pauline Bax]( and [William Clowes]( explain.
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âThereâs not a single place in the world where you find such a concentration of hydropower as here,â said engineer Omer Kawende. Photographer: Marc Jourdier/AFP
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