According to Kashmir Media Service (KMS), Hindu hardliners assaulted three Kashmiri youth in Nangloi area of New Delhi.
In another incident, a 24-year-old Kashmiri journalist, Jibran Nazir, was beaten up in Pune.
Nazir, who works for a local newspaper, said that the assailants told him that they would send him back to Kashmir.
Meanwhile, the authorities have booked an illegally detained youth under draconian law, Public Safety Act (PSA), in occupied Kashmir's Pulwama district.
Pulwama attack rage puts Kashmiri students against the wall in India
The authorities shifted Muzamil Ganai, a resident of Chatpora area of the district, to Kot Bhalwal Jail in Jammu after slapping him with the PSA. Muzammil was arrested by the police last week on the charges of pelting stones on Indian troops.
His family members, however, refuted the police claim that he was involved in stone pelting.
On Thursday, some Kashmiri students had also been suspended by Indian universities for allegedly posting 'insensitive comments' on social media about the suicide attack, while others have been arrested on sedition charges.
India’s home ministry has ordered state governments to protect Kashmiri students – but several political leaders have also stoked aggressive anti-Kashmir sentiment since the bombing. “Don’t visit Kashmir … Boycott everything Kashmiri,” Meghalaya state governor Tathagata Roy wrote on Twitter.
With additional input from AFP
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