MUZAFFARABAD: A territory-wide shutdown ‌in Pakistan-administered Kashmir has brought daily life to a standstill after the region’s deadliest unrest in years left at least 24 people dead in nearly ​two weeks of protests. The confrontation between local authorities and supporters of the recently banned Joint Awami Action Committee, or JAAC, poses a sensitive challenge for Islamabad, which frequently criticizes Delhi’s handling of dissent in Indian-administered Kashmir but is now facing anger in the territory under its own control. The unrest began ahead of a June 9 strike called by the JAAC in protest against ‌the reservation ‌of 12 seats for refugees in ​the July ‌27 ⁠elections to ​the ⁠region’s 45-seat legislative assembly. The refugees live in Pakistan after being displaced from Indian-administered Kashmir.

Protests had already grown in the days before the shutdown, with government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, saying at least 20 civilians were killed between June 6 and June 14 and dozens more wounded. Regional police chief Liaqat Ali Malik said four ⁠officers had been killed and 97 wounded in clashes ‌with protesters, while 515 people had ‌been detained. Thousands of JAAC supporters are ​now camped out on the ‌outskirts of Rawalakot, about 100 km (62 miles) south of Muzaffarabad, the regional ‌capital.