# Pakistan bans its own Kashmir protest movement as Rawalakot deaths fuel anger in Azad Kashmir
> The JKJAAC, which led protests demanding cheaper electricity and flour, was proscribed on June 5 after 11 people were killed in Rawalakot; Amnesty called it criminalisation of dissent, and the crackdown has deepened the political grievance Pakistan needs to keep latent

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2026-06-05 · heads: 何が壊れたか, 語られていないこと · 9 takes · 5 lenses · 6 regions

## Summary

The government of [Pakistan](/ja/entity/country/pakistan) proscribed the Jammu and Kashmir Joint Awami Action Committee (JKJAAC) as a terrorist organisation under the Anti-Terrorism Act on June 5, 2026. The JKJAAC had led a protest wave across Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) demanding subsidised electricity (AJK provides hydro power to Pakistan's national grid but pays market tariff) and administered flour prices. On May 24-26, protests in Rawalakot turned violent; 11 civilians were killed in confrontations with Rangers and Frontier Constabulary. Pakistan's own internal inquiry found the deaths were caused by security-force fire, a finding the government has not publicised. The proscription triggered a shutdown called by JKJAAC leaders, a condemnation from Amnesty International, and criticism from Human Rights Watch. The political significance is structural: Azad Kashmir is fiscally dependent on Islamabad and has almost no autonomous budget, making the welfare demands implicitly a challenge to how Pakistan administers the territory it holds in the Kashmir dispute. [[The Wire]] notes the contradiction that Pakistan proscribed a civilian welfare movement in the territory it presents to the UN as illegally occupied by [India](/ja/entity/india-pakistan), undermining its diplomatic framing.

## The split

The Government of Pakistan and Radio Pakistan frame the proscription as an anti-terrorism measure against a movement that incited property destruction and violence. Dawn and Pakistan's liberal press note the government's own inquiry contradicts the violence-incitement charge. Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch call it suppression of peaceful economic protest. Indian commentary (The Wire) uses it to argue that Pakistan's control of AJK is as coercive as what it accuses India of in Jammu and Kashmir, a point made from an explicitly adversarial position.

## By the numbers

- June 5, 2026, JKJAAC proscribed under Pakistan's Anti-Terrorism Act.
- 11, civilians killed in Rawalakot, May 24-26, 2026.
- 2, security-force branches involved in Rawalakot: Rangers and Frontier Constabulary.
- 2023, JKJAAC's first major protest wave over the same electricity and flour demands.
- 0, convictions of security-force members for the Rawalakot deaths as of June 27.

## Why it matters

[Pakistan](/ja/entity/country/pakistan)'s management of AJK sits at the intersection of its domestic stability, its Kashmir diplomacy and its India policy. The JKJAAC protests reveal that Islamabad's fiscal control of the territory generates civilian grievance that, if sustained, could grow into a legitimacy problem at the UN precisely when Pakistan needs to keep the Kashmir issue alive diplomatically. The proscription, by criminalising welfare protest, may suppress the movement in the short term while deepening resentment. The timing, immediately after the first anniversary of the India-Pakistan ceasefire, adds domestic political sensitivity.

## What to watch

- Whether JKJAAC reconstitutes under a different name and whether the protest movement sustains despite the ban.
- Independent inquiry: whether Pakistan produces a public finding on the Rawalakot deaths or keeps it internal.
- Electricity and flour subsidy: whether Islamabad offers an economic concession to AJK to defuse the structural grievance.
- India's use of the JKJAAC episode in international forums to challenge Pakistan's Kashmir diplomatic standing.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### unlabelled
- **Ministry of Interior, Government of Pakistan** (Pakistan, en) — Official Government of Pakistan notice proscribing the Jammu and Kashmir Joint Awami Action Committee (JKJAAC) as a terrorist organisation under Schedule I of the Anti-Terrorism Act on June 5, 2026; cites incitement to violence, destruction of government property and sedition against the Pakistani state.
  Source: https://www.interior.gov.pk/press/june-2026-jkjaac-proscription
- **Radio Pakistan / APP** (Pakistan, en) — 
  Source: https://www.radio.gov.pk/news/jkjaac-proscription-azad-kashmir-june-2026
- **BBC Urdu** (United Kingdom, ur) — 
  Source: https://www.bbc.com/urdu/articles/jkjaac-ban-rawalakot-2026
- **Human Rights Watch** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://www.hrw.org/news/2026/06/pakistan-azad-kashmir-protest-crackdown
- **Al Jazeera** (Qatar, en) — 
  Source: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/06/pakistan-bans-kashmir-protest-group-jkjaac

### Pakistani liberal / press-freedom watchdog
- **Dawn** (Pakistan, en) — Reports the June 5 proscription and the political backlash inside Azad Kashmir: JKJAAC leaders called the designation 'political victimisation' and announced a protest shutdown; Dawn's Islamabad bureau notes the government's core charge, violence incitement, is contradicted by its own inquiry that attributed the 11 Rawalakot deaths to police and paramilitary fire during protests rather than JKJAAC-organised violence.
  > "Pakistan's own inquiry attributed the Rawalakot deaths to security-force fire, not JKJAAC violence - the proscription's legal premise is contested by the government's own record."
  Source: https://www.dawn.com/news/2026/06/jkjaac-banned-azad-kashmir-crackdown-rawalakot

### human rights / international law
- **Amnesty International** (Global, en) — Amnesty International statement condemning the JKJAAC proscription as criminalisation of peaceful protest: documents the 11 deaths at Rawalakot in May 2026, with witness accounts attributing lethal force to Rangers and Frontier Constabulary; calls for an independent inquiry; notes JKJAAC's campaigns were centred on electricity tariff subsidies and flour price caps, not secessionist politics.
  > "Amnesty called the JKJAAC ban 'criminalisation of peaceful dissent,' documenting that the May Rawalakot killings were caused by security-force fire, not protesters."
  Source: https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2026/06/pakistan-azad-kashmir-jkjaac-ban/

### Pakistani mainstream / political analysis
- **The News International (Pakistan)** (Pakistan, en) — Pre-proscription analysis of the JKJAAC protest wave: the movement's demands are welfare-economic, subsidised electricity (Azad Kashmir provides hydro power to Pakistan but pays market tariff) and flour at administered prices; the political significance is that Azad Kashmir's civilian government has almost no fiscal autonomy, making the economic demands implicitly a challenge to Islamabad's control architecture.
  > "JKJAAC's demands are economic, but Azad Kashmir's fiscal dependency on Islamabad means 'cheaper electricity' is structurally a challenge to how Pakistan controls the territory."
  Source: https://www.thenews.com.pk/latest/azad-kashmir-jkjaac-protests-electricity-wheat-2026

### Indian adversarial / Pakistan-critical
- **The Wire** (India, en) — Indian-perspective analysis: reads the JKJAAC proscription as Pakistan banning a pro-people movement in the territory it claims to speak for at the UN as 'occupied' by India; argues the crackdown undercuts Pakistan's Kashmir diplomacy by demonstrating that Islamabad's relationship with Azad Kashmir's population is itself coercive; notes that Rawalakot deaths occurred on the eve of the India-Pakistan ceasefire anniversary.
  > "Pakistan banned a welfare protest movement in the territory it claims India 'occupies' - undermining the diplomatic case it presents to the UN."
  Source: https://thewire.in/south-asia/jkjaac-ban-pakistan-azad-kashmir-dissent-crackdown-2026

## Across the graph
- Related: [[india-kashmir-jammu-shift-2026]], [[india-pakistan-isolation-backfire]], [[pakistan-budget-2026-27-imf]], [[pakistan-ttp-bla-two-front-insurgency-2026]]
- Entities: India Pakistan, Country:pakistan

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Canonical: https://rbtfl.xyz/ja/n/pak-azk-jkjaac-protests-2026