1. Various of protesters throwing stones at police, who fire back with tear gas
2. Various of protesters throwing stones at a government veterinary hospital where police and paramilitary soldiers were taking shelter
3. Protesters throwing stones at police and soldiers
4. Police driving off in van, as protesters pelt it with stones
5. Protesters chanting pro-freedom slogans, calling for secession from India (protests were against both Charlie Hebdo and the Indian government)
6. Various of protesters marching; some carrying signs reading (English) "Dishonouring Prophet is (the) worst kind of terrorism", and "Our Prophet ... Our honour and pride"
7. SOUNDBITE (Urdu) Muhhamad Afnaan, protester:
"We want to say that we will never tolerate any cartoon made of our Prophet in France, neither will any Muslim brother tolerate it, our fight will continue against France (French caricatures)."
8.Various of protesters chanting (Urdu) "Our faith and pride is Muhammad, peace be upon him", and holding signs
A march in the north Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir turned violent on Wednesday, as demonstrators clashed with police in the streets of Srinagar.
The march was to commemorate the killing of 50 people by Indian paramilitary forces in 1990, but quickly turned into a protest condemning the French magazine Charlie Hebdo for their controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
Protesters threw stones at police and attacked government institutions, while police responded with tear gas.
Protesters shouted a mix of slogans against both the Indian government and Charlie Hebdo.
Anti-India sentiment runs deep in Kashmir where rebel groups have been fighting against Indian rule since 1989.
More than 68,000 people have been killed since 1989 in the rebel uprising and a subsequent Indian military crackdown that has suppressed most rebel activity.