<p>More than 100 Hindu families have fled Kashmir as panic spread after the killing of a Hindu school teacher in the region, a community leader said on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Militants on Tuesday <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/woman-teacher-shot-at-by-terrorists-in-jammu-and-kashmirs-kulgam-dies-1113974.html" target="_blank">shot dead Rajni Bala</a>, 36, outside a government school in Kulgam that lies south of Srinagar - the latest in a spate of targeted killings of Hindus and Muslims.</p>.<p>Avtar Krishan Bhat, president of a Hindu Kashmiri Pandit colony in Kashmir's Baramulla, said that around half of the 300 families living in the area had fled since Tuesday.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/those-who-killed-teacher-in-kulgam-will-be-given-unforgettable-response-manoj-sinha-1114078.html" target="_blank">Those who killed teacher in Kulgam will be given unforgettable response: L-G Manoj Sinha</a></strong></p>.<p>"They were terrified after yesterday's killing. We will also leave by tomorrow as we are waiting for a government response," he said. "We had asked the government to relocate us outside Kashmir."</p>.<p>Residents said police had sealed off a Hindu area in Srinagar and stepped up security around places where Kashmiri Pandit government employees live.</p>.<p>The local administration did not immediately respond to a request for comment on families fleeing, but the region's top government official, Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha, last month assured Kashmiri Pandits that measures would be taken for their security.</p>.<p>Some 2,50,000 Kashmiri Pandits left the Kashmir valley because of a sharp rise in the killings of Hindus and attacks on their homes at the start of a rebellion by Muslim militants in 1989.</p>.<p>Last month, a Kashmiri Pandit working for the local government was shot dead inside his office, leading to protests by other employees from the minority community who demanded re-location to safer areas outside the Kashmir valley.</p>.<p>"We have killed all those militants who were responsible for the earlier killings," Kashmir valley's police chief Vijay Kumar told <em>Reuters </em>on Wednesday.</p>
<p>More than 100 Hindu families have fled Kashmir as panic spread after the killing of a Hindu school teacher in the region, a community leader said on Wednesday.</p>.<p>Militants on Tuesday <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/woman-teacher-shot-at-by-terrorists-in-jammu-and-kashmirs-kulgam-dies-1113974.html" target="_blank">shot dead Rajni Bala</a>, 36, outside a government school in Kulgam that lies south of Srinagar - the latest in a spate of targeted killings of Hindus and Muslims.</p>.<p>Avtar Krishan Bhat, president of a Hindu Kashmiri Pandit colony in Kashmir's Baramulla, said that around half of the 300 families living in the area had fled since Tuesday.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/national/north-and-central/those-who-killed-teacher-in-kulgam-will-be-given-unforgettable-response-manoj-sinha-1114078.html" target="_blank">Those who killed teacher in Kulgam will be given unforgettable response: L-G Manoj Sinha</a></strong></p>.<p>"They were terrified after yesterday's killing. We will also leave by tomorrow as we are waiting for a government response," he said. "We had asked the government to relocate us outside Kashmir."</p>.<p>Residents said police had sealed off a Hindu area in Srinagar and stepped up security around places where Kashmiri Pandit government employees live.</p>.<p>The local administration did not immediately respond to a request for comment on families fleeing, but the region's top government official, Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha, last month assured Kashmiri Pandits that measures would be taken for their security.</p>.<p>Some 2,50,000 Kashmiri Pandits left the Kashmir valley because of a sharp rise in the killings of Hindus and attacks on their homes at the start of a rebellion by Muslim militants in 1989.</p>.<p>Last month, a Kashmiri Pandit working for the local government was shot dead inside his office, leading to protests by other employees from the minority community who demanded re-location to safer areas outside the Kashmir valley.</p>.<p>"We have killed all those militants who were responsible for the earlier killings," Kashmir valley's police chief Vijay Kumar told <em>Reuters </em>on Wednesday.</p>