Sunday, 31 July 2016

#Day24: DSP PC Imam Sahib Shifted Out

Shaikh Hilal

SRINAGAR

The Jammu and Kashmir Government have shifted out Dy SP Police Component Imam Sahib in South Kashmir’s Shopian, sources said.

Sources said another DSP rank officer, Manzoor Ahmad, joined duties on Sunday.

Imam Sahib Shopian witnessed massive uprising as locals alleged “unspeakable atrocities” by forces.

On Friday evening, three persons were hit by bullets including a lady who hit in her abdomen. The trio are in Srinagar hospitals. Scores of others were injured by pellets.

Massive protest demonstrations were witnessed in Imam Sahib area where an SOG camp is located in main chowk.

“Forces even did not spare Jamia Masjid which was damaged,” a local said, “when people reacted, even women folk faced excesses.”

The new Dy SP PC Imam Sahib is a resident of Drass while his predecessor has been shifted to Home Guard Department.

Meanwhile, BSNL officers in Shopian are not receiving the monthly bills. “Banks are closed so we cannot receive any payment as directed by our higher ups,” an official at a BSNL office in Shopian told customers.

Due to reluctance of BSNL officials to receive the monthly bills, many land line and mobile phone connections have stopped working. Even the only source of internet in the whole Kashmir region too has stopped working in Shopian.

Several attempts to contact GM BSNL did not materialize as the officer did not respond.



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Night of Pain

A day after Burhan’s killing in nearby Bemdoora village, restive tourist hotspot Achabal reacted quite unexpectedly. Aakash Hassan reports how three deaths have left the area in mourning

Achabal-victimsWithin minutes of Burhan Wani’s killing in Bamdoora village, almost everyone in Achabal area, 15 kms from Kokernag, known for its alluring Mughal gardens, came on the streets to protest. By night fall, Achabal witnessed thousands marching towards Kokernag, who wanted to see where Burhan was killed. Most of them were on their way to Tral, to participate in Burhan’s funeral.

That night, said one of the eyewitnesses, no one slept in Achabal. There were clashes outside police station till 2 am.

The next morning, once again people gathered in Achabal chowk, while a huge procession of people from Chiturgul, Magraypora, Nowgam, Dialgam, Brinti, Shehlipora villages began marching towards the chowk.

Within minutes people clashed with government forces and CRPF, who responded with tear-smoke shells, pellets and stones.

After an hour, forces withdrew to their garrison and police station. But, the anger among protestors by now was at its peak, as they circled the police station. “It seemed like police and CRPF will run out of ammunition,” said an eyewitness. “They rained pellets, tear-smoke shells and bullets.”

One bullet hit Sakib Manzoor Mir, 16, in the head. He was from nearby Khundro village. “He left home to buy medicine,” said Sakib’s wailing mother Shakeela Akhter.

In 2007, Sakib, a cricket buff, survived miraculously when Khundroo ammunition depot caught fire. “That time he was hit by an explosive shell, had to get through multiple surgeries,” said Sakib’s brother Rameez.  “He had 103 stitches on his body. Only his head was left.”

“This time he was hit on the head,” said his mother amid sobs.

Rameez said, Sakib could have been saved had CRPF not stopped and beaten him at Sangam. “They wasted precious one hour,” said Rameez. “They (CRPF) beat us all ruthlessly.”

Rameez remembers CRPF men saying him that, ‘he is already dead. Now we will kill you too.’

It was only after CRPF beat everybody that the ambulance was allowed to pass. “Doctors (at SMHS) apologized to the family saying, ‘he had lost too much of blood because. You came late.’”

Around same time, Danish Hussain, 17, from Magraypora and Abdul Haseeb Ganie, 18, from Brienty village, were hit by bullets. “They too died the same day,” said a local.

Danish’s killing has set a pal of gloom in his family. “He was first male child among 12 girls in the family. He was their hero,” said Mohammad Ayoub Shah, his father.

Danish had recently appeared in Class 10 by-annual examination, after he missed the main exam due to poor health. “He was out to buy curd from Achabal market when CRPF fired at him,” said Shah who sells shawls in Kishtwar. “I had arranged a feast for my sisters at my house.”

However Danish’s friends say that he was keen to join protestors; that is why he left home to buy curd in such a situation. “He was angry like everybody else,” said one of his friends. He too was hit in the head like Sakib.

Third boy killed that day was Abdul Haseeb Ganie, a Class 12 pass out, who ran a grocery shop at Brinity village of Dialgam.

“We were watching from a closed alley while a cop fired directly at us,” said Ganie’s brother.

Immediately, he was shifted to Islamabad hospital, from where he was referred to Srinagar.  “But as CRPF and STF were stopping ambulances from reaching hospitals, crucial time was lost. And he died midway,” said his brother. “I watched him bleed to death. He was in lot of pain.”

With three boys dead in a single day Achabal was on a boil. A local told that people had identified one policeman, who was firing from the bunker. “Another one was shooting a video,” said an eyewitness who wished not to be named. Frustrated and pained by the civilian killings people marched towards the police station and tried to set it ablaze. But they were stopped.

Then people marched towards the house of the cop in Gopalpora village, who was firing from the bunker, and set it afire.

The days that followed July 9, saw more than hundred people getting injured from Achabal in clashes with CRPF and police.

“I have never see people so angry. I have never seen such a bloodbath either,” said an elderly from Achabal.



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Uploading Uprising…

Before it could trigger uprising in Arab world in 2010, the social media blitz had already made 2010 Kashmir summer a digital upheaval. Six years after, as another seething summer unfolded in valley with restricted online activity, Bilal Handoo details the impact of social media and its role in Kashmir’s summer slams

Lal-Chowk-Gathering-on-Eid-Day-2010Three days before Tufail Mattoo’s killing in downtown Srinagar, an Egyptian Google executive Wael Ghonim was shocked by a gory image of his fellow countryman in Dubai on June 8, 2010. That 28-year-old jaw-broken man was Alexandria’s Khaled Mohamed Said whose image had made it to internet like Tufail’s brain-splattered picture. Egypt’s Khaled had stark resemblance with Kashmir’s Tufail: both killed in police action, both disfigured and both became flashpoints of two different uprisings in two different regions.

What Ghonim shortly did politically galvanized Internet. He created a Facebook page—Kullena Khaled Said (We Are All Khaled Said)—and posted: “Today they killed Khaled. If I don’t act for his sake, tomorrow they will kill me.” Over 250,000 people ‘Liked’ his page within 90 days. What bubbled up online shortly spilled onto streets and culminated into the historic Tahrir Square rally in downtown Cairo a year after.

That summer in Kashmir (with Arab Spring yet to bloom), Ghonims were already galvanizing internet: “We Are All Tufail Mattoo”. One Srinagar-based columnist tweeting non-stop during the 2010 uprising couldn’t make a distinction between Facebook users and dissident bloggers — both posting at their own peril. “Social media fuelled 2010 uprising in Kashmir,” says the columnist, now a low-key government official. “As I remember it, Facebook was catalyst to make that summer a kingmaker in Kashmir’s dissent dateline.”

By putting “revolution” on Facebook, Valley’s Ghonims were informing the world about everything happening in Kashmir claimed both by India and Pakistan. And it was working.

A swift change was noticed in Indian urban, middle-class — otherwise blasé about Kashmir news. In 2010, social media’s instant nature showed them the ‘other picture’ of Kashmir. (From 0.7 million in 2008 summer, Facebook users in India had risen to 13 million by August 2010.)

Tweeting, updating and uploading was “empowering” Kashmiris to highlight their plight without facing censorship and gate-keeping of traditional media. But a year ago, things were different.

Shopian double rape-murder protests hadn’t set social media afire. Still a year ago, 2008 Amarnath land  row was unable to trigger online fury — as few used Facebook, and fewer Twitter. But 2010 ‘online Intifada’ went ballistic and made user-driven online activity an epic encounter. Not only it informed 10 million plus Indian online community about Kashmir issue, but also triggered an apparent change the way Delhi media reported Kashmir. Back home, it was proving to be a ‘new found’ expression.

“Seeing those images, videos on Facebook was only making resistance a religious duty,” says Shahid Bhat, a banker, who faced police summon in 2010 for his pro-active online campaign. “For me, Facebook was cathartic platform to vent suppressed sentiments and to question occupation.”

Then, Cyber Sangbaaz Force struck. That group of Kashmiri hackers began taking down official websites clashing with their “ideas of justice”. They were like global Vigilante Hackers that emerged in 2011, and hacked CIA’s, Sony’s and Syrian government’s websites on behalf of freedom of information.

Amid this raging online activism, the ‘beleaguered’ Kashmir community was getting hopeful that their “pro-freedom uprising would have global backing”. Out of this belief stemmed an idea to assemble at Srinagar’s Lal Chowk. Before they would come, they shared their imminent arrival on social media.

State sleuths calling post-9/11 ‘dateline’ as militancy’s ‘deadline’ in Kashmir like elsewhere were apparently biting their nails over possibility of watching  50,000 plus dissenters at Lal Chowk. While they were still exploring options to counter it, the marchers blocked Kashmir’s trade heartland in one summer day. Suddenly it seemed that the barricades didn’t bristle with bayonets and firearms — but, with phones.

Perhaps a ‘prized’ moment of that march was youth holding phones aloft amid cheers and chants, taking pictures of few ‘daredevils’ mounting on the clock tower with Pak flags. Later that year, when the dissenters in Tunis Medina held aloft their blackberries to picture somewhat similar scenes, many thought that global dissents share a common umbilical cord.

In Tunis, those were the scenes of Twitter or Tunisian Revolution — starting when a young man Mohamed Bouazizi set himself afire on Dec 17, 2010 after officials prevented him from selling vegetables on Sidi Bouzid streets.

Later world learned that Bouazizi like burning had already taken place in Tunisia in September 2010. Failing to make it to internet like many Kashmir killings prior to Tufail Mattoo’s death in 2010, those deaths never became flashpoints.

“Facebook was huge,” says a cop, detailing social media’s impact in 2010. “A few thousand geeks on Twitter and some ten thousands on Facebook were exposing State’s never seen before torture methods.” That summer, the social media did expose “Abu Ghraib pattern” abuses in Kashmir prisons.

At 2010 peak protests, two clips left cops red-faced. One clip shows chuckling police forcibly parading four naked young Kashmiri detainees through a field. The second video shows abusive cops forcing a fibre cane into the rectum of a semi-naked detainee.

Police immediately dubbed the clippings “staged” to “stigmatise” the 1873-born state force. But before cops could file criminal case against Facebook and YouTube for hosting them, the clippings had already done damage.

Then, Omar government launched a full-scale internet offensive. Suddenly “anti-government” web-pages and blogs began flashing “404” error message, implying a page being blocked. An online police was recruited and put in action to hunt the social media’s “rah-rah brigade”. For the former blogger Omar Abdullah who had quitted blogging in the face of trolling, the virtual crackdown on bloggers, Facebook pages, Twitter handles and anonymous users seemed only saving grace.

Calling a few pages “anti-India” before culling them was akin to give a dog a bad name and hang him. Omar’s conduct made many to equate him with ex-Kyrgyz president Askar Akayev who had blocked access to various “dissent” websites during the 2005 “Tulip Revolution” in his post-Soviet nation.

Despite tactical match, Omar proved to be chip off the different block. After banning texts, calls and videos, Omar — jabbing at his blackberry — would say: “Democracy has responsibilities.” With an aura of his signature airs, he would hasten to put in: “It gives you rights, but how you use it also has repercussions in Kashmir that can be deadly.” For a Shopian banker, social media did prove “deadly” than “democratic” tool later that fall.

When police arrested Mufti Wajid Yaqoob of Baba Mohalla Shopian in Oct 2010, he was slapped with lawless Public Safety Act and shifted to Kathua jail for “organizing” protests in his hometown through Facebook. He wasn’t alone. Omar and police force he headed tried making an example of dissenters. The move backfired.

It was the time when the underground bandmaster of Kashmir’s dissent orchestra — the ‘Go India, Go Back’ crusader, Masrat Alam — was propelling the uprising with his pro-freedom calendars. With social media multiplying his dissent messages, Alam became the face of street defiance whose appeals resonated among youth and students. At the end when Omar Abdullah government captured Zaindar Mohalla’s rebel with spying acumen of Zanglipora’s sleuth Altaf Laptop, the summer protests waned.

With jailbird Alam sent back to prison, the state started hounding dissenters. Police summoned 35 administrators of Facebook pages tagged as “anti-India”. Dozens of FB users were booked under PSA — prominent among them were pro-independence leader Shakeel A Bakshi, Islamabad cleric Qazi Yasir and others. Keeping hawkish gaze on online activities, police even booked the ex-broadcaster and now PDP member Nayeema Mehjoor for broadcasting her FB views from abroad.

One cyber cop says different computer tools were used to trace people uploading “objectionable content” on Facebook and other social networking sites. “For us,” the cop says, “the virtual policing wasn’t an option but obligation in the face of massive online blitz. We were the first to crack whip on online dissenters. Ours was the first cyber army before Syria could raise its much-talked about Syrian Electronic Army in 2011 to launch cyber attacks on anti-government online activities.”

With state’s virtual counter-insurgency grid persecuting Kashmir’s online community for broadcasting “peace threatening” views, the move backfired like it did in Egypt where Hosni Mubarak blocked Internet for five days in early 2011 only to hasten his fall.

Then, social media was mobilizing masses, building support and ‘romanticizing’ the old featured stone-throwing protests. Amid this, Arab spring erupted in Tunisia in Dec 2010 with the popular slogan: Ash-sha`b yurid isqat an-nizam (the people want to bring down the regime). Spreading shortly to ten countries, the protests toppled regimes, created constitutional reforms in Arab world. West called it ‘digital democracy’ brought by videos, cellular phones, blogs, photos, emails, and text messages.

In Kashmir, Mehbooba Mufti was probably first unionist to congratulate Egyptians. “It’s necessary to mention Egypt because there are many similarities,” said Mufti, then fiery opposition leader, now an apparent Omar-reincarnate. “They were fighting for democracy; we are fighting in spite of democracy. We have been fighting for the last 60 years.” It miffed Omar Abdullah to an extent of tweeting this: “It seems, she wants Army rule in Jammu and Kashmir.” An “uneasy” crown wearer, Omar was one of those who believed that “revolution can’t be tweeted”.

But if truth be told, both 7-Race Course and Gupkar never wanted resurrection of 2010—until, they dramatically gunned down Kashmir’s new age dissenter in Kokernag hamlet on July 8, 2016.

From Hizb’s courier in 2011 to its commander in 2014, Burhan Wani’s cyber outreach had made him a “darling rebel”. Sleuths say he would regularly tweet from a particular twitter handle that now stands suspended. “He first uploaded his unmasked photographs along with his comrades around Srinagar,” a CID officer says. “He was clear-headed militant who made militancy a heroic idea for youngsters through images and videos.” Burhan’s social media blitz made him a “cult figure” for around 60 percent of Kashmir’s below 30 population — tagged as “hyperactive” on social media by state intelligence.

After six eventful years, Burhan’s passage not only triggered rage on ground but also stirred online fury. Despite ban on mobile internet, the hashtag storm trended him on virtual world for days together. Kashmir’s surging social media users – from 25 percent in summer 2010 to 75 percent in summer 2016 – equally made him a global phenomenon.

But posts “glorifying” Burhan were soon censored. Being “famous” in Pakistan, Burhan managed to create ripples where an actor Hamza Ali Abbasi’s Facebook post on him was removed. Many Kashmiri Facebook users also faced virtual suspension. Later Facebook “receiving second highest annual requests from India after US” clarified that it took down content that “praises or supports terrorists…” But this clarification coming from Facebook raised many eyebrows. “Wasn’t Facebook the same platform,” many asked, “used by Burhan as a weapon?” The enigma was later solved by a senior state sleuth.

Invoking recent meetings between PM Narendra Modi and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, he says, everyone in security setup was aware how the entire Kashmir situation was being remote controlled through social network. “Unlike 2010,” the officer says, “we didn’t allow Facebook warriors to call their choicest shots this time around.” Amid debate over probable government role in recent Facebook controversy—the fact remains that social media’s power did compel governments to intervene in it.

When the “twitter-driven” student protests rocked Tehran in 2009, the US State Department brazenly asked Twitter to suspend its scheduled website maintenance — as it didn’t want “switching off” of “such a critical tool” at peak protests. For its “empowering” role in Iran, a former national-security adviser later called for Twitter’s nomination for Nobel Peace Prize!

Today as the war cry for “freedom” has again resounded in valley, the restricted social media is busy detailing Kashmir’s street mood. Emerging situation in valley seems no different from the concluding scene of 1966 classic The Battle of Algiers, the movie depicting struggle for Algeria between France and Algerians.

“Go home,” a stressed French police officer directs a stone-throwing Algerian crowd, “what do you want?”

Behind the tear-gas smokescreen, comes a piercing chorus: “Istiqlal! Istiqlal!” (Freedom! Freedom!)

After 2010, many case studies done to detail social media’s impact in Kashmir’s uprising only recreated the Algerian demand.

One study done by state agencies suggests that people in September 2010 alone used the word “Istiqlal” (Freedom) 97% times on Facebook, followed by “Go India, Go back”.

Six years after, Kashmiris appear no different on Facebook.



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That Televised War

It has been 17 years since India and Pakistan fought a ‘localized’ war over the hills between Zoji La and Siachen glacier. Following Vajpayee’s Lahore initiative, months after the nuclear tests by the two countries, the war added the new trust deficit in the sub-continental bilateralism, reports Masood Hussain

Kargil-War--bofors-gunAs deadline approaches, newsrooms routinely get tense. Fact cross-checking, getting the best of statements of people who matter, last time additions; it is the time for pushing the stuff to the desk. In 1999, my table in Kashmir Times was still looking like a ‘virtual mortuary’ as day’s “kill count” was still the top news.

“You are doing nothing, only smoking,” my friend, Prof Afzal Qadri, poked me on phone from Kargil on May 8 evening. He was there for conducting an examination. “It is jung (war) here as many people have crossed the line (LoC).” In the midst of the call, voice quality deteriorated and the line snapped. I neither got a call from him nor did I attempt one from Srinagar. He was calling from a police officer’s home.

It proved my career’s biggest mistake. Next morning, our competitor Excelsior had the “war” as its banner. As the fighting escalated and the ‘localized’ war became the first military conflict in subcontinent’s television history, I reported the war till the rivals disengaged but the regret of losing the scoop is still there.

One factor responsible for my complacency was the fact that Kargil was routinely being pounded by Pakistani gunners for the last few years. On September 12, 1998 when I accompanied the then food minister Ajay Kumar Sadhotra, following Pakistani shells decimating the Food Corporation of India (FCI) go-down in Kargil, army stopped us on the banks of roaring Drass river for the whole terrifying night when shell-thuds and high-speed winds were choreographing a haunting tune. A Pakistani shell had landed on the road turning turtle an oil tanker. They were apprehensive that a second hit could trigger a conflagration that could destroy a convoy. A similar incident had roasted two truckers earlier near Hunderman.

But 1999, as the subsequent days established, was not 1998. A sizeable chunk of soldiers had infiltrated taking over the inhospitable heights soon after Indian army descended down for winter. Intrusions were later detected by Batalik shepherds and the soldiers took their own time to cross-check and react. But the Kargil war was perhaps the second conflict between India and Pakistan in which J&K Police were more informed. That advantage helped me get a better coverage of things, till Delhi media houses flew their teams to stay embedded.

Initially, it seemed as if the Pakistanis were control of a hill. But the 72-days war starting May 3, as I saw it later, involved 142-kms of LoC from Zoji La to NJ 9842 (Siachin Glacier start) and envisaged a series of peaks, humps, saddles and various junction points of ridges. Rival sides have exchanged the ownership of some of these hums since 1947. Peak 13620 (the number is its height in feet) in Drass, for instance, was held by Pakistan in 1947-48. Later in 1965 India captured it and returned after the Tashkent agreement. In 1971 war, India recaptured and retained it till the ‘intruders’ in 1999 took it back.

Till 1982, when Siachen became the flashpoint, BSF would normally manage some of these ridgelines round the year. Stationed over Marpo La (5353m) and Sandu (4268m) in Drass sub-sector, the army took-over and changed the tradition. The high-altitude peaks being inhospitable and nearly glaciated during winters, the rival armies would withdraw late autumn and returned at the peak of summer, a situation that still exists on LoAC that separates J&K from China.

“Preparations for this operation had started much earlier,” a retired Kashmir Police officer responsible for basic intelligence gathering in 1999 said. “We had reported Pakistani choppers flying low in the upper reaches for most of the winter and they had dumped lot of ammunition and supplies in the empty pickets of Indian army.” The officer specially flew in the area many days ahead of the conflict and his report was technically the only document India’s security grid possessed. Initially believed to be a militant operation, the report had insisted the intruders were from Pakistan’s Northern Light Infantry.

These choppers, it was later established, had flown three 105 mm field guns, weighing 1200 kgs each, after dismantling them and rejoining deep into this side of LoC. Positioned not far away from Peak 4833, somewhere between Drass and Mushkoh Valley, these field guns decimated the Drass Brigade Headquarters and hit targets on patches for most of the 27 kms of the highway between Drass and Kargil. In certain areas, Pakistan had entered nearly 8 kms inside.

It was one such shell that landed a few feet away from the bus I was travelled in on May 27. I saw another shell hitting a telecom tower leaving two persons injured who were picked up by a chopper like an eagle, flowing so low that I felt I could catch it.

Much later in 2008 Col (retired) Ashfaq Hussain revealed in his Witness to Blunder: Kargil Story Unfolds that General Parvez Musharaf had flown in on March 28, 1999 and travelled 11 km into the Kargil. Accompanied by Brigadier Masood Aslam of 80 Brigade, the colonel revealed that Musharaf actually spent a night at Zikria Mustaqar and interacted with the troops commanded by Col Amjad Shabbir. Vindicating the Kashmir police assessment, the book revealed that the first intrusion was spearheaded by Captains Nadeem and Ali and Havaldar Lalik Jan on December 18, 1998, who were on a reconnaissance mission. The major intrusion was planned on their ground assessment.

For acknowledge the contribution in detecting the intrusion by Tashi Namgyal and two other shepherds from Batalik’s Garkon, Delhi took 13 years. Even in 1999, it took him many days to convince the soldiers that what he was saying was correct. His earlier whistle blowing in 1998 summer had proved a damp squib impacting his credibility. Then the shepherd had to drive to Kargil and meet Shalin Kabra, the then Deputy Commissioner, who eventually took him to Surinder Singh, the brigadier, who was later shamed out and dismissed for alleged complacency.

kargil-war-presser“The most horrible instance was the first major attack when a couple of shells landed on the ammunition depot,” remember Abdul Hamid Bhat, the then DSP, who retired after his Bosnia stint with UN peacekeepers. “The depot was smoldering for four days and it ignited different kind of ammunition that eventually rained on the town itself forcing us to manage evacuation of civilians to Sanku and other places.”

Most of the Kargil was deserted and resumed life in Trespone and Sanku. 18 civilians died in the war, mostly during initial days of shelling. Even Army shifted its Khurbathy garrison to Wakha. As residents of Batalik moved to Leh, the Ladakh Buddhist Association upped the ante insisting that people “with un-established credentials” were “intruding” in Leh.

But the accuracy with which Pakistani gunners were pounding targets, it seemed as if they knew everything. Bhat had gone to rescue his shell-shocked cops who were hungry for many days in their Drass station that his vehicle barely survived an attack. His colleague Bashir A Sofi had his lunch in a classroom – his quarter always devastated, that a shell landed on the same desk. “I had gone to wash the hands and that was the saving grace,” Sofi, now an SP rank officer, said. In Drass, a TV crew had finished the interview of a few soldiers who had returned from the frontline that a shell landed the same spot, killing an officer of 17 Garhwal Rifles and his three subordinates. Offices and the residences of DC and SP were hit forcing the two to live in dungeons for many days.

Within minutes after the then Prime Minister A B Vajpayee landed in Drass on June 13, shells targeted the area. Bhat remembers the premier being escorted into an underground bunker and later flown back.

The army had, in fact, spread a rumour that the then Chief Minister Dr Farooq Abdullah upheld, suggesting a lady was directing Pakistani fire on this side. This forced police to act but Bhat says they could not get even a shred of evidence. Finally, wagging tongues were put at rest after Kargil elders threatened that had locals collaborated, the town would have been Pakistan already!

Comprising the ridgelines of Jubber, Kokerthang and Khalubar, Batalik sub-sector has the toughest terrain with scores of plateau-less peaks, trisected by three glacier fed torrents. It connects with Drass sub-sector through Muntho Dalo, stationing the main intruder base camp.

As the army planned response, the shock came from Drass where intruders targeted everything – the highway, the town, and the entire infrastructure. It shifted priorities.

As fighting started, it seemed a heady task because intruders controlled peaks. Within less than 48 hours after IAF was inducted on May 27, two fighter planes were down along with a gunship chopper. Soon, fighter officers termed it a ‘black hole’ as anything going up the hills was being consumed. IAF had told that they were actually facing lot of difficulty in pounding the enemy positions because they were literally indistinguishable from the Indian position. That was perhaps why the artillery proved the best alternative in “softening” the targets. Bofors howitzer, all of a sudden, became the darling of the heights erasing the memories of its historic baggage. Within a fortnight after its induction, Swiss company had its reps in Delhi handling multi-million dollar spears order!

Initial days of response were visibly gruesome. In panic, tens of thousands of soldiers demobilized from Kashmir were inducted into the war theatre. I remember watching soldiers literally in their t-shirts moving up the hills. At Ghumri where a tented hospital was started by army, injured would tell stories of sheer human courage in approaching the peaks. There were instances of fathers and sons fighting from different sectors and neither of them knowing anything about each other.

Drass-Kargil belt was almost impassable. Nobody in Drass had stayed back except a few vegetable sellers, a barber and non-local tea vendor despite the area having 4412 dungeons. They were catering to the daily requirement of nearly 3600 porters, mostly Nepalis of which five died in the war. One had to live under open skies or in the shade of a boulder. Even the space in rundown Siachen hotel at Kargil was shrunken. News was nowhere around, especially for the local reporter. I spent a few days and finally returned to Srinagar.

City was calm. Primarily, the separatist camp was totally uncomfortable with the Pakistan army intervention that was aimed at undoing Vajpayee’s Lahore initiative. The other reason was a rumour that if tensions escalated into a full-fledged war, the army would opt for culling the separatist element. Initially, the militants made a series of attacks between Banihal and Kangan, hitting the convoys being inducted into the war. Security grid reacted by shifting the Director General Rashtriya Rifles (RR) to Srinagar and making him the sole security adviser to Chief Minister thus sparing both the corps commanders from the CI duties.

Kargil-War-1999Those days witnessed a strange situation. Given the massive appetite that hills in Kargil exhibited for fighters, entire garrisons were emptied by soldiers. In one case, that I reported for Kashmir Times, in one north Kashmir village the commander of the camp summoned the Muqdam and handed him over the keys and left. They kept the custody till the soldiers returned later in September.

Kargil war saw killing of 527 soldiers and 71 of them belonged to J&K, mostly from Ladakh Scouts (Pakistan is reported to have suffered more). Unlike rest of India, however, the families whose members were killed were talking in hushed tones as media witnessed in Dachinpora and Rafiabad. Lance Nailk Ghulam Mohammad Khan of 12-JAKLI in Katsoo Nadibal was the first Kashmir soldier who was laid to rest by a modest village crowd. Many of the war widows fought protracted battles with their in-laws over compensation. Interestingly, however, the tourism in Kashmir remained unaffected even though the army took over the Srinagar airport on May 25, and shifted civilian traffic to IAF base in Koil (Pulwama).

Once the fighting stopped, a new corps was set up for Ladakh. Now tens of thousands of soldiers guard the heights in near-Siachen conditions. Against minus 45 degrees celsius on Siachen, Drass as second coldest habitat outside Siberia witnesses going down to -50. Wind speeds are between 100-150 Knots, Oxygen content in atmosphere depletes on the same scale (against 21 percent in plains it is to the maximum of 15 over the peaks) and the Wind Chill Factor (WCF) remains between 1400 and 2000. Soldiers serving these heights normally see loss in weight as well as memory. While the chilling winds afflict with chill blain, frost bite or the gangrene, the least oxygen quality either encourages the water-logging in brain (cerebral oedema) or lungs (pulmonary oedema).

On August 16, the then I&B Minister Pramodh Mahajan’s son Rahul hosted a huge musical extravaganza to celebrate the victory. Armed forced boycotted the event but 4000 people were in the audience on Dal banks watching entire Bollywood perform. In the orchestra din, I was thinking if the celebrations would have been same had the diplomacy not taken over the guns.



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Smouldering Summer

Six years after 2010 summer triggered Kashmir’s new age militancy, killing of a young rebel stirred up another summer of dissenting and bloodletting. With Omar advising successor Mehbooba against stepping into his shoes, it seems old wisdom is at play in managing the ongoing turmoil, reports Bilal Handoo

Lal-Chowk-Gathering-on-Eid-Day-2010That giant rally with over 500,000 dissenters in 2008 summer was enough to make it a “sentimental sea” of strength. Described as the defining moment in Kashmir’s post-ninety rebellion, that huge human assembly at Srinagar’s Eidgarh saw peoples’ hostility taking shape of the substantial street strife.

Those days, a dispute over 99 acre Amarnath land for Hindu shrine had revived vintage war cry for freedom in valley. Shortly, Delhi’s hunky dory theory of Kashmir was scoffed at, despite “puny” militancy, “marginal” Hurriyat and “booming” tourism.

“That was a people’s movement,” says Yasin Malik, JKLF chief, then threatening to fast unto death if the land order wouldn’t be revoked. “It was a shift of armed struggle to non-violent means.” With everyone coming together to challenge Delhi’s rule in post-9/11 era Kashmir, the Genext went ballistic, expressing uninhibited political expression on streets. For two nuke neighbours already done fighting three wars over Kashmir, the summer upheaval only strained the uneasy ties.

As ragda, ragda became Kashmir’s new dance of defiance, the unionists termed it a failure in engaging people. Shortly Islamabad reacted. It supported the protesters, prompting irked but traditional response from Delhi: “There is a Pakistani hand behind the unrest.” But on Kashmir streets, Delhi’s “Pak hand” theory had long become a subject of ridicule.

“That summer,” says a scholar, Waseem Bhat, part of 2008 protests, “Amarnath land row was just a trigger. It was a long awaited moment to revolt against years of security onslaught and long denial of freedom. It was the summer of our discontent.”

On June 23, 2008, the first protests against the land transfer broke out in Old City. A JKLF (R) leader part of the protest saw CRPF opening fire on protesters at Nowhatta, killing one person, wounding 40 others. “It never stopped after that,” says the leader, still making rounds of court for his participation. “It was a beginning of our new struggle, new dissent. That summer weaponised us to fight for our justice, honour and freedom.” With Hyderpora, Maisuma and Nigeen giving wake-up calls to Kashmiris over the land transfer, the besieged city and elsewhere took to roads in rage.

Amid protests, Congress-led government clarified only washrooms and shelters for devotees were going to be built on the land. But people and Hurriyat leaders compared the move to Israeli settlements in West Bank. Even Congress’ alliance partner, PDP, threatened to desert the coalition if the land transfer agreement wouldn’t be revoked. This prompted authorities to scrap the plan. The decision, in turn, sparked protests in Jammu — J&K’s only Hindu-majority city.

Despite revoking the land transfer, the crisis deepened further. PDP didn’t lend support to state government, forcing Ghulam Nabi Azad’s minority government to step-down on July 7, 2008. But by then, the media had exposed PDP’s “political gimmick”—as the party’s forest minister, Qazi Afzal, was proven to be final authority behind the controversial land transfer.

BJP was keeping Jammu on boil over revocation order and emerged as main force behind the economic blockade. Kashmiri traders threatened to export their products via Muzaffarabad and Wagah border. That summer sent home a troupe of blinded Kashmiri truckers, rendered sightless in lynch-mob attacks on highway.

In valley, the casualty was rising. For attempting to cross LoC, forces killed fifteen people, wounding hundreds on August 11. As protests intensified, gunners even opened fire on a protest rally led by ex-minister Javed Mustafa Mir in Lasjan, killing four protesters.

Amid bloodbath, the Amarnath agitation ended on August 31, 2008, following signing of an agreement between protesters and governor-appointed panel. Under the agreement, the shrine board would be making temporary use of 40-hectares of land during the relevant yatra period.

But many in valley were left stunned after realising how Jammu dictated terms over their summer uprising.

In later part of 2008, new government took over. The youngest chief minister Omar Abdullah was lauded as the “potential game changer”. The England-born Kashmir top executive promised an era of reconciliation, zero human rights tolerance, gradual demilitarisation, repeal of contentious AFSPA, restricting use draconian PSA and even setting up of Truth and Reconciliation Commission. But his first spring as J&K CM coincided with Shopian double murder case, triggering a 47-day protest shutdown. While an autopsy report confirmed rape of the two sister-in-laws, the government appointed one-man commission held four police officers responsible for destroying evidence.

As Kashmir revolted, Delhi called CBI for a fresh probe. Its findings only created resentments. It concluded that the women died of drowning in a knee-height brook. CBI then filed cases against doctors involved in previous probes and lawyers fighting the case. They were charged for inciting violence. This triggered massive loath. Before Kashmir would rage up again, a lull period ensued, featured with periodic killings.

Next year in June, army’s claims to have gunned down three “Pakistani infiltrators” at Machil were seriously contested. It didn’t take Kashmir much time to learn that it was a fake encounter case in which a soldier, a counter-insurgent and an ex-special police officer had lured three young men from Baramulla’s Nadihal village and killed them in a staged encounter at Sona Pindi.

“Almost every encounter now has a question mark,” CM Omar reacted. “Army is the judge, jury and the hangman. There’s absence of transparency, as a result of which people have lost faith in the system.” Omar’s assertions found resonance in those families whose sons were long subjected to enforced disappearances. “One can say,” says Khurram Parvez, a rights activist, and one of the persons to unearth mass graves in Kashmir, “the Machil was the reaffirmation of the belief how army, paramilitary or police would kill innocent Kashmiris in fake encounters and passed them as militants. What happened at Machil left nothing unsaid for imagination and therefore became a flashpoint.”

Shortly cops shot dead teenger Tufail Mattoo in Old Srinagar, triggering the uprising. With Hurriyat batting for demilitarized Kashmir, youth raising pro-freedom slogans defied curfews and attacked forces with stones. Many chipped in with creative protests: graffiti, music, poetry, dramas. The artistic touch made the protests novel and perhaps, far-reaching on soon-to-be banned internet. But defiant streets had their own idea to engage the state.

To contain street defiance, police purchased new age “non-lethal” weaponry—Tasers, pellet, peppers, stun guns and laser dazzlers—mainly from Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO) with Rs 30 crore funds allocated by Delhi. But despite using these “non-lethal” firearms, police and paramilitary still managed to pile up 123 bodies in that summer, and wounding hundreds.

Before Amnesty International could dictate Indian forces to stop using gunfire against protesters, PM Manmohan Singh asked for revisiting operating procedures. He right away tasked his economic adviser C Rangarajan to find economic solution to the political problem!

For a change, Delhi proposed all-party meeting in troubled Kashmir. Saying that dialogue was the only way to find lasting peace, it sent invitations to Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Yasin Malik — earlier excluded from 2008 all-party meeting in wake of Amarnath land row.

Later that fall, the 39-member delegation including home minister P Chidambaram arrived in valley, apparently to defuse the tensions. On the day of their arrival, three young men succumbed to their bullet-wounds in hospitals, while troopers shot dead a woman in Sopore.

Amid killings, the delegation announced measures: release of students, reopening of schools, debate on demilitarisation, reviewing of areas designated as disturbed and appointment of interlocutors. They even announced “blood money” of Rs 5 lac to the families of those killed in summer protests.

The caged Hurriyat presented its demands. Among his five preconditions for official dialogue, Syed Ali Geelani called for a ban on shooting on anti-establishment demos, release of political prisoners, official acknowledgement of Kashmir dispute and others. Mirwaiz Umar Farooq demanded constitution of Indo-Pak parliamentary committees for final settlement of disputed Kashmir. Yasin Malik demanded that Hurriyat be made a part of Kashmir-specific Indo-Pak dialogue process.

Scenes of 2010 Lal Chowk Chalo.

Scenes of 2010 Lal Chowk Chalo.

But Delhi, says Mirwaiz, never honoured their demands. “The only time they show some interest in Kashmir is when it is burning,” the cleric says. “And they only engage Hurriyat when killings, protests and peace of graveyard grip valley.”

That summer the third-generation Abdullah had called army to restore street calm. He banned text messages and internet to cut size Kashmir’s virtual dissent. “I’ve had better days, but I’ve had worse, too,” Abdullah said in an interview inside his well guarded Gupkar mansion. “That’s why they say chief minister of Kashmir is one of the toughest jobs in the country.” With Delhi’s assistance, Omar at fag end of 2010 put together an action plan.

“The main idea was to keep Kashmiri youth away from streets,” says Dr Sheikh Mustafa Kamaal, NC veteran and Omar’s uncle. “Maintaining peace was paramount to us. In absence of it, nothing could have been achieved.”

The C Rangarajan panel appointed by PM Singh in August 2010 called for Rs 2,000 crore package to employ 40,000 people in five years. For imparting market-driven skills to 1 million Kashmiri youth, Himayat and Udaan schemes were launched. PM special scholarships were announced to benefit 25,000 students for five years. But most of these initiatives ran in rough weather over mismanagement and holdup funds.

“Already,” says Haleema, a distraught wife of a Kashmiri trucker blinded on highway near Samba during 2008 Amarnath land row, “my son has been sent home six times in last three years over fees.” Her only son is pursuing B. Tech on PM scholarship in a Chandigarh-based college. “Last time, he told me in disgust: ‘I will pick up gun if they again send me home!’ ”

Despite backlash, Delhi sponsored recruitment drives of youth in paramilitary, police and army. MHA even sanctioned a special plan of Rs 104.09 crore to recruit youth in paramilitary. “When several youth queued up for such recruitment drives,” says a senior scribe, “it was read as the sign of change by unionists, pro-state activists and Delhi media—rather a clear desperation of educated youth to avail employment in a highly unemployed region.”

Apparently to prevent another summer uprising, police actively focussed on its civic action plan — organising counselling sessions and opening up youth clubs at various places. Quranic sessions for “misguided” youth were also held in police lockups.

“Suddenly, ‘Catch them Young’ doctrine involved everyone — from chief minister to army commander,” says a former SHO of Nowhatta police station. During his posting in restive Nowhatta area after 2010, the officer says, “I had clear orders from higher ups to undo the ‘radical’ mindset of stone pelters through religious reforms.”

So, did it work?

Burhans-Funeral“Yes, it did—but failing to achieve the desired end,” the officer says. “But that hardly discouraged us using other methods to reach out to youth and engage them.” Social media was one such engaging method.

But amid this self-styled squaring off, police was true to its traits — cracking whip on dissenters. No sooner the 2010 protests ended, police rounded up 4,294 persons. Around 200 of them including seven government employees and two minors were booked under lawless PSA. Over fifty government employees were detained, two of them dismissed from services over stone-pelting charges.

Further trailing the 2010 protests were nonstop nocturnal raids in valley’s “volatile” pockets and crackdown on Hurriyat leaders. “To keep close eye on dissenters,” says one CID officer, “Kashmir became stronghold of sleuths and spies who raised their human intelligence network.” Cops even profiled families on pretext of Census exercise amid mushrooming of gawking CCTVs and surveillance towers. To “maintain law and order”, state went for complete re-verification of pre-mobile services after silencing them.

These measures touted as the ‘defeat of dissent’ in valley apparently bred the ‘politics of indifference’. Amid the stringent state management, Delhi apparently binned the interlocutors’ report. This made many believe that Delhi never learned its lessons in Kashmir. With its “ambitious” action plan gone haywire, the Kokernag killing only resurrected the old guards in valley.

Amid bloodletting, the chief minister of yore known for creating “carnage out of uprising” has already left a message for t government has forgotten them for some reasons.”

Amid this political wordplay, the dawn of another summer has already made Hurriyat to declare it people’s movement they seem to have no control. Youth being at the heart of the current uprising seems its ground managers. “People running over military installation clearly indicates that 2016 is fiercer than 2008, 2010,” says Khurram. “Intensity of the current uprising makes it appear like a battle for existence now, hence more lethal.”

With Delhi already acknowledging a tough task at hand, Pakistan’s “hyperactive” involvement has already triggered diplomatic tensions. The valley’s fiery countryside and equally fuming city are testing the “north pole-south pole alliance”, seemingly desperate to send normalcy signals around. Amid the midsummer discontent, the grapevine has it that Delhi might again try to provide economic solution to the political problem.

But the uptight cleric climbing fence in protest these days has already made it known: “No economic largesse will tempt this generation.” From Jamia Masjid pulpit last summer, miffed Mirwaiz lashed out at Delhi’s doles: “We don’t want grants, we don’t packages, we don’t want jobs… We want?”

Thus came the thunderous chorus, already resonating in valley that summer: “Freedom!”

With old chorus reverberating again, this summer seems no different.

 



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Unmoved

As Kashmir is getting into the fourth week of unrest following Burhan killing in Bamdoora down-south, nothing much is  visible in response from the governments in Delhi and Srinagar. Masood Hussain details the happenings in the ideologically split political space from Srinagar to Delhi

Fatigued in the ding-dong battles with protestors in last 21 days, top police officers faced the real big challenge last week when mother of one of their colleagues died. For paying condolences, they lacked the option of hotline. They had to personally move deep-north.

“We started shortly before mid-night and after three hours we were back,” a top officer said. “The schedule hit the functioning the other day but the option of travelling during the day was not there.”

Post-Burhan, police are facing massive street crowds. Already 55 youth stand lowered in their graves as hundreds are recovering in various hospitals and at home. Some have even flown out of Kashmir. This has added to the anger that is currently ruling the streets. The strike has forced a new movement system even on civilians. Now people move during wee hours or after the dusk.

But the more efforts the police are making to come out of the Burhan syndrome, the more they are sucked into it.

The last push was from the Chief Minister herself. While coming out of her party’s Raising Day, celebrated off the media gaze for the first time, she raked up Burhan encounter again. “I believe that had they (police) known he was there, (Burhan) Wani would have been given one chance as the situation was fast improving in the state,” Ms Mufti said about the July 8, Bamdoora encounter. “How are we supposed to know everything about every encounter? As far as I know, what I heard from the police and the army, who said they only knew that there were three militants inside the house but did not know who they were.”

Reviving Burhan three weeks after his killing has ‘disturbed’ her party and the security grid. “The fact of the matter is that we were desperate to arrest him because that would have helped us undo the iconic status he had created for himself,” a top police officer told Kashmir Life. “But the party that raided the spot never knew who was inside and this led to his killing in the brief encounter that gave birth to a hero and a saint.”

The officer, speaking anonymously, said that there is no system in place in the state suggesting that Chief Minister should know about an encounter site. Some times, even the officer controlling the territory also does not know. The presence of a top intelligence officer from Delhi in Srinagar, who is also understood to have met the Chief Minister, was merely a ‘coincidence’. “I do not believe even the Home Ministry has any role in Burhan’s killing,” the officer said. “It just happened in routine.”

The officer is disturbed over Chief Minister’s statement that it conveyed the security grid has the option of “giving another chance”, which, he said, has never happened. Top PDP leader and MP Muzaffar Hussain Baig, however, has been consistently asking if there was possibility of capturing Burhan alive “as has happened in past” so that they could be persuaded into the mainstream.

Amid the raging debate over ifs and buts of the encounter, the aftermath has proved terrible. With the life surviving besieged, the governance has seemingly taken the backseat. Like Lal Chowk, civil secretariat is also deserted. Like the sets of a horror film, one walks and listens the echo of his own foot-tapping in the corridors. Activity is limited to a few rooms housing the offices of ministers and top bureaucrats. Last week, a minister’s bored and idle personal security officer put on a romantic number of his mobile and the people in the entire floor converged to listen.

The only thing visible in the secretariat is the government’s apparent failure to adequately react to the situation that was created by the teen rebel’s killing. Three weeks later, Kashmir is still counting its dead, the pellet-injured, blind and the one-eyed. In Lal Chowk, bird chirping is audible only if an ambulance siren does not break the lull. The inability of the government’s in Srinagar and Delhi to have a sympathetic response to the happenings is being considered “deliberate” by people who matter in Kashmir’s ideologically split political landscape.

“Nobody has condemned the killings and blinding, so far,” Mirwaiz Umer Farooq regrets. “Normally governments acknowledge the crisis and then engage the society but here they do not even convey a word, there is no concern being shown at any level, it is unremorseful.”

Kashmir’s resistance camp comprising Syed Ali Geelani, Yasin Malik and Mirwaiz has not met even once. Malik is in jail and the two others restricted to their homes. A frail Geelani gets a trickle of visitors but his health does not permit him to talk for so long. He offers his prayers on a chair. “Delhi has never acknowledged the sufferings of the people in Kashmir,” he said. “People have given enormous sacrifices and I have a firm belief that they can not get waste.”

“The criminal silence of the government conveys they are not bothered,” Mirwaiz said.

Feeling is no different in the unionist opposition NC that faced 2010 unrest for longer time and with more deaths. “The government is under pressure from Sangh Parivaar so it is not forthcoming,” says Nasir Sogami, former Jr Home Minister and provincial head of the party. “By now, many things could have happened but they seemingly are unwilling.”

From the unionist and the separatist camps, comparisons are being drawn with the last unrest, the 2010. “There was some lip-service in 2010 but this time there is no empathy,” Mirwaiz said. “Though it (strike) is all for Kashmir issue, they are not even talking on AFSPA, demilitarization or even release of detainees. They are not even acknowledging the destruction that pellet guns have led to. They are unwilling to withdraw them.”

Sogami said that in 2010 Delhi was responsive as it flew an all party delegation, which met people, visited hospitals, and later appointed the interlocutors. “This time, nobody is sharing the pain,” Sogami said. “The government is missing and these are not good signs because people feel pushed to the wall.” Despite all the criticism, observers see NC’s overall reaction “measured and guarded”, partly because it survived a similar situation in recent past and partly because the PDP loss in the ongoing crisis may not be an NC gain.

Hurriyat leaders said they have already offered a list publicly that could mark the beginning of any forward movement. Apart from accepting Kashmir as a dispute, the Hurriyat suggested CBMs including withdrawing the AFSPA, and PSA, setting free political detainees, demilitarization, UN human rights investigations and granting political space. “There hasn’t been any response so far,” regretted Mirwaiz.

Veteran journalist Mohammad Sayeed Malik who has been witness to the Kashmir history for last half-a-century sees a pattern in all these happenings. “Unlike scale, the current situation is almost similar to 2010 and 2008 and if you study it keenly the complexion of the response has not changed,” Malik said. “Change in political ideology in Delhi’s governance structure does not change the Kashmir policy.”

For Delhi, Malik said Kashmir is an “expendable entity” and it has been offering high-dividends throughout. For becoming Prime Minister Rahul Gandhi, for instance, made a conscious choice of hanging somebody who was No 28 on the list only because he was a Kashmiri and a Muslim. “If you see Kashmir from Delhi’s perspective, you may find that somebody there manages a scoreboard,” adds Malik, who has spent many decades as editor in Delhi.

Protest-in-Hyderpora-on-Sunday-July-22-2016“One party stays silent and does nothing and other party makes noise, seem active and eventually keeps quite,” Malik said. “Chidambaram flew the all party delegation and then halted the entire process after situation improved in 2010.” He believes all these things are aimed at “appeasing the Hindu sentiment”.

The silence by the local government is hurting the people more. “Our government did in seven hours what the last regime did in many months,” admitted a former minister. Even medical records establish that 2016 was more intense than 2010. But Naeem Akhtar who speaks for the government insists that they are not hiding in the secretariat.

Akhtar gets angry when told that 2016 has devoured the distinction that his PDP had over its rival, the NC.

“We do not have a comparison,” Akhtar said in his deserted office. “They are conformists, and believe in least resistance. With 28 seats we are attempting to get what they failed even with two-third majority.”

“I am telling you again that we do not believe in anger-management,” Akhtar asserted. “We have taken up things (with Delhi) strictly as per the road map we believe in because our alliance is dictated by new realities and electoral mathematics and not convenience of being in power.”

His party, Akhtar asserts, does not want to get into “histrionics or dramatic argumentation” because it has already conveyed its partner that “dialogue, reconciliation and engagement with the people of J&K” is the only way forward. “Let me tell you there is a tripping point,” he asserted.

Apart from two meetings with the Prime Minister by one of its key ministers, PDP’s entire “process” was restricted to Home Minister Rajnath Singh’s overnight visit to Srinagar. Insiders claim there was “unpreceedented  plain-speaking”.

One senior minister has explained to Singh that PDP sacrificed everything by helping the “triangle” get completed for the first time in history – a reference to strong political connectivity between Kashmir, Jammu and Delhi. “It had enormous political costs for PDP,” he has said. “But whatever has been happening in response (from Delhi) is mere cosmetic as the Agenda of Alliance has not been taken up.”

Another PDP leader has told the visiting Home Minister that the sea of people who offered funeral prayers to Burhan also included “voters of NC, PDP and Congress”. “We gave you 80 percent poll participation and you responded by doing nothing and then we lost the argument,” the minister has said. He has said that the ally BJP has not “appreciated” the costs for the visible inertia in Delhi.

Agenda for Kashmir, another minister is reported to have stated, is being set by streets in the plains of India and Pakistan. “You spend Rs 75 crore on PMSSS a year and my daughter in Mumbai is working on a package of Rs 5 lakh per month but is not getting a flat to live because she is a Kashmiri Muslim,” the minister has said, “Now she is flying home. Where is the argument that I have to sell?”

So far one MLA was attacked and is in hospital and another had his home and business already set afire. Some ministers are feeling it difficult to even convince their own families about their alliance.

Yet another minister said the government in Delhi is escaping from what it has committed already. “We have to go from room to room to get what we require and which is part of the routine,” the minister has said.

The situation, insiders said, had infuriated BJPs Lal Singh. “Kashmir has a deep wound inside, treat it,” Singh has shouted in his own style. “If our party is committed to the Agenda of Alliance, why are not we seriously pursuing it?” Praising the Chief Minister for respecting the Jammu mandate, Singh has hinted that situation in Jammu would have been ugly had not the alliance been in place.

“You are occupying the same chair that our founder occupied once,” one angry young man from PDP has told the Home Minister. “Despite doing whatever he could at massive costs, you converted him into a pro-Pakistan politician in last year of his life?” He was referring to Mufti’s first press conference at Jammu after taking oath of office in March 2015 in which he thanked Pakistan and militants for the elections. This statement triggered a media trial pushing Modi to back-foot.

NC that submitted a detailed memorandum to Home Minister sought immediate resumption of dialogue with separatists and Pakistan and restoration of the greater autonomy.

But Malik says Kashmir’s “masters” are not changing. “Occupants have changed in Delhi but not their policy,” Malik said. “Kashmir is managed by unhealthy, narrow-minded bureaucratic set up.” He sees a serious failure in Delhi’s outreach. “Last time they flew parliamentarians and they talked to all without compromising the position on any side,” Malik said. “It should have been followed adequately but they appointed interlocutors and then forgot what they had said.”

NDA in Delhi is meticulously measuring its steps. Modi was supposed to fly to Islamabad for the SAARC meet. Now Home Minister is going. Fearing it might give some “benefit of doubt” to some people at some levels in Kashmir, an MEA spokesman clarified that he will do nothing on bilateral front. Interestingly, the Kashmir situation has taken Pakistan by surprise, if one goes by what a senior Pakistani diplomat told Kashmir reporters in Delhi.

In immediate short-term, both NC and Hurriyat and even vast sections in the PDP were expecting that pellet guns would be immediately withdrawn. “Home Minister said he has already set up a committee that will report to him in two months,” one former PDP minister said. The issue on ground is that if 3000 people with pellet injuries rushed to hospitals in three weeks, what will happen in eight more weeks?

Two developments are reported to be underway: reducing the physical infrastructure housing the security men by almost half and investing massively in the electoral surveillance especially in the urban spaces. Already in the meeting, Singh had said that some of the space in occupation of troops will be returned. There is a plan to open gates of shareholding in the system for the restive youth.

The curfew-strike cocktail being sustained with a real communication breakdown has triggered its own crisis at various levels other than the obvious impact on economic well-being.

Right now, Jammu is silent. But a top NC leader told Kashmir Life that tensions are abounded but the belt is simmering. “The hawkish right-wingers are getting good audience and support but it is not public,” the leader, talking on the condition of anonymity said. “Since most of industrial Jammu has Kashmir as its market, it is severely impacting the local economy which is adding to the tensions.”

An officer who was associated with the “movement” of encouraging youth to opt for civil service is hurt over how electronic media hit him. “Now you have 4000 people applying for civil service examination against 28000 from other regions,” the officer said. “What will happen? The government will lose its legitimacy for lack of local human resource.” The officer said the youth are in moral dilemma right now. “They feel the pain when the pellets blind the boys and they think they could be comfortable with stone throwing boys on streets rather than secretariat white collars”

Mirwaiz said the anger is unprecedented and the youth are uncompromising. “They are unwilling even to grant people a few hours of respite to bring in provisions fearing it might neutralize the programme,” Mirwaiz said. “Youth say they have not been able to get anything out of what happened in 2008 and 2010 so it is better to do things once for all.”

Barring Chief Minster flying to three districts and meeting some of the families at district headquarters, nobody from the political parties has offered condolences to the bereaved families. “We are not even getting space to meet (with Geelani and Malik), how can we visit the bereaved families which should have ideally been the first step,” Mirwaiz asked. “This regime was talking about healing touch but after seizing power it has lost even basic human values.”



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In Line Of Fire

With more than a hundred ambulances damaged in last three weeks, ferrying injured to the hospitals is getting risky for drivers. Ubeer Naqushbandi reports 

Ambulance-during-2016-curfewA speeding ambulance comes to a quick halt outside Shri Maharaja Hari Singh (SMHS) hospital’s emergency ward.

Before Nasir Ahmed, 27, the driver of the ambulance, could park his vehicle, volunteers swung into action and rushed injured inside the hospital. A tall boy, in his early twenties, raised his arms in air and shouted: hum kya chatee?

Others reciprocated: Aazadi…Aazadi.

As Nasir finally parks his vehicle, a small crowd of other ambulance drivers, circles him. “Were you stopped anywhere by the forces?” they asked him.

“It was difficult, but I managed,” he answers.

As he settles down on a wooden chair, Nasir narrates how he had narrow escape on July 9, a day after Burhan Wani was killed in an encounter in south Kashmir’s Bamdoora village. “I was taking a dead body to Bijbehara town. He had succumbed after suffering a cardiac arrest,” recalls Nasir.

On way, Nasir came across people offering gaiyabana nimaz-e-jinaza (funeral prayers in absentia) for Burhan. “After dropping the body home, I headed back to Srinagar,” said Nasir.

At around 2:30 pm when Nasir reached near Awantipora police station, he stopped, as protests taking place at some distance. “They (CRPF) were very angry. I could sense that,” said Nasir.

Suddenly, one CRPF personnel started firing directly at the protestors. “I was chaos, I thought nobody would be spared,” said Nasir who saw one young boy getting hit by a bullet. “He fell on the ground.”

Before Nasir could have turned back towards Bijbehara, protesters circled his vehicle. They wanted Nasir to rescue the injured boy from CRPF’s clutches. “He was lying on the ground with blood coming out of his abdomen. They (police and CRPF) were kicking him ruthlessly,” said Nasir.

After taking a deep breath, Nasir hit on gas and negotiated his way through CRPF and STF personnel, stopping close to the injured boy.

“An ASI rank police officer, who was continuously kicking the boy, suddenly stopped and bundled the boy inside ambulance,” recalls Nasir. “I don’t know what made him do so.”

The policeman ordered Nasir to “take him to the hospital else they (CRPF men) will kill him.”

Within minutes the policeman was proved right. “CRPF men attacked the ambulance as the boy was helped in,” said Nasir.

Somehow Nasir managed to drive past forces and drove towards nearest hospital in Pampore. “I was stopped outside Pampore by CRPF. They dragged the boy out and beat him again,” said Nasir.

After five minutes of mayhem Nasir was allowed to move. “His wounds were bleeding badly,” said Nasir.

At Pampore hospital, Nasir saw another 45-year-old person, who was hit by a bullet in his lower back, being treated.

After plugging their wounds, Nasir was told to rush them to SMHS immediately. “Be quick, or they will not survive,” a doctor told Nasir.

After locking ambulance doors, Nasir drove towards SMHS.

As Nasir reached Kadalbal chowk, it appeared like he was driving through a ghost town. “Only CRPF and STF men were visible on the roads,” says Nasir.

To avoid CRPF’s wrath, Nasir took an alternative route via Lasjan, Tengpora to reach SMHS. “At SMHS amid sloganeering duo were rushed towards operation theatre. Thankfully both survived,” says Nasir.

Nasir’s colleague, Sajjad Ahmed Lone, 30, had same story to share. On July 15, Lone was instructed to bring two surgeons from home in Srinagar outskirts. “They were needed at SMHS to manage the rush of injured,” said Lone.

When Lone reached near Natipora, there were clashes going on between protestors and forces. “Protestors made way for ambulance,” said Lone.

But, when Lone reached in “forces territory”, they stopped him, asked for his identity, and began checking his ambulance. “They were angry. They were not in a mood to let me go. So I sped away,” said Lone. “They (CRPF men) smashed tail lights and threw stones using catapult. There was every chance they could have fired at me,” said Lone.

On his return Lone changed route to avoid confrontation with CRPF men again.

Abdul Rashid, 40, a senior ambulance driver, who was listening keenly to Lone and Nasir’s experience said, “We face hostile situation from both protestors and forces. Nobody understands that we are here to save lives.”

He is seconded by Mohammad Shafi Tantray, 48, another ambulance driver. “Protestors accuse us of ferrying force personnels, which is not true.”

Ambulance-during-2016-uprisingOn July 11, Dawood Ahmed Mir, 27, was heading back after dropping eight patients home from Lal Ded hospital Srinagar.

At around 10 pm, when Mir reached near Gagarpora (Jawaharpora) RR camp, he was stopped by the forces. “There were clashes going on a few miles away,” recalls Mir.

After stopping him, Mir was asked to switch off the headlights, cabin lights quickly. “Then after loading their guns, they got into the ambulance,” said Mir. “They wanted to reach the protesters and catch them in surprise.”

Realizing it would result in to a bloodbath Mir began pleading with the soldiers. “They didn’t listen,” recalls Mir. “I was sure it would end in a massacre. So I didn’t move an inch.”

After five minutes of cohesion, threats, and abuse, Mir was finally let go. The next challenge for Mir was to cross the territory held by protestors. “They could have mistaken ambulance for an army vehicle in the dark,” said Mir. “It was extremely dangerous.”

While approaching the protestors Mir began shouting at top of his voice, “Yeh ambulance hai…Yeh ambulance hai (It’s an ambulance).”

It worked. “I was allowed to pass peacefully,” said Mir.

But Mohammad Ashraf, 37, was not so lucky. On July 16, after dropping an elderly women’s dead body at Kupwara, Ashraf was rushing home, when he was stopped by protestors. “They got angry and started abusing me,” said Ashraf. “I asked them why are they so angry with an ambulance driver.”

Their answer shocked Ashraf. “An hour ago, forces alighted from an ambulance and beat everybody around,” Ashraf was told. Similar incident was reported by another driver, who was caught near Soura (Srinagar) by protestors, because an ambulance had dropped CRPF men in the midst of a crowd. “They (CRPF men) had ransacked everything and beaten people ruthlessly,” said Ganie.

A research involving 35 ambulance drivers from three major hospitals in Srinagar states that 83 percent of the respondents have experienced threat of physical harm. The research carried by Dr Shabbir Dhar states that around 54 percent of drivers have experienced physical assault. According to a Jammu based newspaper 110 ambulances were damaged by CRPF and police in last three weeks. Most of them while ferrying injured from south Kashmir.

Before Nasir leaves for another journey into curfewed city to transport injured, he looks at the gravestone of Ghulam Nabi Bhat, who lies buried inside SMHS.

Bhat was killed in the line of duty on July 20, 1992, when he was answering a distress call from city outskirts. “He was shot by BSF and killed instantly,” said one of the drivers.



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#Day23: Geelani To Unionists, ‘Your Crimes Are So Heinous That They Will Never Be Forgiven’

KL NEWS NETWORK

SRINAGAR

Syed Ali Geelani (C) along with Peer Saifullah (R) and Ayaz Akbar (L), addressing press on May 02, 2016 at his Hyderpora residence-cum-office. (KL Image: APHC-g Media)

Syed Ali Geelani (C) along with Peer Saifullah (R) and Ayaz Akbar (L), addressing press on May 02, 2016 at his Hyderpora residence-cum-office. (KL Image: APHC-g Media)

Hurriyat patriarch Syed Ali Geelani on Sunday termed the unionist politicians as “real enemies” of people of Jammu & Kashmir.

“Their crimes against their own people are so heinous that they will be never forgiven and forgotten for that,” ailing Geelani said in a statement issued late early this evening.

“These people (unionist politicians) are responsible for the miseries and bloodshed of the Jammu & Kashmiri people and they are playing an important role in strengthening the Indian occupation in the state. The day has come when they will be held accountable for their sins and crimes which they have committed against the humanity,” the octogenarian leader said.

Geelani, who remains under continuous house detention, said, “the pro-Indian politicians had accepted the psychological slavery of the Indian rulers since 1947 that is why they every time play a selfish role whenever the people of Jammu & Kashmir raise their voices against the Indian military occupation and use the uprising and the pro-freedom sentiments to gain power.”

Geelani said that these “traitors” include a tall man of this nation and “without any fear to regret, I will say that all the bloodshed, killings and rapes that took place in this region after 1947 are credited to this person who betrayed the simple people of Kashmir, exploited their sentiments by showing them the Pakistani salt and the green hankie and led them to hell instead of heaven. It has been the biggest tragedy of our history”.

“But the worst tragedy is that the people who were betrayed showed extreme political immaturity and welcomed the same person with open arms who sold their future for his personal interests,” he said.

The pro-freedom leader added that “his legacy of treason
is now carried forward by “today’s loyalists of India who are riding our backs with the backing of 10 lakh Indian armed forces”.

“In the hunger of power, these people have left the entire nation at the mercy of the merciless and cunning Indian forces who brutally kill our innocent children in the broad day light,” he said.

Geelani asked the Unionist politicians that how long will they “hide behind the Indian forces?” “They will have to pay price for their evil deeds?”

Reacting to the statement of Union Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, V K Singh, that “Kashmiris are as patriots as other Indian people”, Geelani said, “the Kashmiri people have never accepted India in the past and nor will they do it in future.”

“The status of India in the eyes of the majority population of Jammu & Kashmir is of an aggressor and oppressor,” Geelani asserted.

He questioned Singh that “if you people are so confident then why are you afraid of holding of plebiscite in Jammu & Kashmir which has been promised by the Indian leadership to Kashmiris at national as well as International forums? Why are you so scared of facing the people’s verdict?”



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#Day23: Undeclared Curfew, Shutdown Continue In Valley

Kashmir News Service

SRINAGAR

Shutdown on July 31, 2016

Curfewed Srinagar on July 31, 2016. (KL Images: Bilal Bahadur)

Undeclared curfew continued to be imposed in parts of Srinagar city and south Kashmir while strict restrictions were imposed in force in others parts of the Valley to thwart protests by the people.

Curfew continued on Sunday in the areas falling under six police stations in Downtown and Batamaloo area of Srinagar and in towns of Islamabad, Pulwama, Shopian and Kulgam, a police official said.

People offered 'Asr' Namaz on roads as a 'mark of protest' in Srinagar.

People offered ‘Asr’ Namaz on roads as a ‘mark of protest’ in Srinagar.

Restrictions were placed in Baramulla town, Bandipora, and in Handwara areas and in Imam Sahib area of Shopian district

Namaz on Roads at Rainawari on July 31, 2016

The shutdown called by the separatists also continued today, with both curfew and shutdown paralyzing life in the Valley.

Rajouri Kadal Curfewed

Schools, shops, and business units continue to be closed down due to curfew and shutdown. Only medical shops are allowed to open across the valley. However, there was no major clash reported today in any part of the Valley when this report was filed.

We Want Freedom

“People are pouring out on streets to protest in these places. During protests, youth start pelting stones and security forces retaliate by firing teargas shells and pellets, due to which injuries take place which further intensify protest,” said the police official, posted in south Kashmir. He wished not to be named.

Go India Go Back

“In order to prevent injuries and protests, we have imposed curfew and strict restrictions in these areas,” he said.

Curfewed Srinagar 1

In South Kashmir’s Pulwama district, a rally was organized by the youth in Karimabad village, the native place of slain HM militant Naseer Ahmad Pandit, a cop-turned-militant, who had fled with three AK-47 service rifles while on duty with former PDP minister, Syed Altaf Bukhari.

CRPF men stopping Ambulance

Witnesses said that thousands of youth had gathered in a ground, adjacent to ‘Martyrs Graveyard’, in Karimabad to pay tributes to the slain militants.

Curfewed Srinagar

The youth had come from different villages of the district including Rajpora, Pinglena, Kakapora, Gudoora, Pahoo, Lelhar, Panzgam, Lajoora, Puchal and several other villages to attend the gathering.

‘Karimabad chalo’ was response to the united resistance leadership call who had appealed people to visit the ‘Martyrs Graveyards’ to offer Fateh Khawani there.

Locals had arranged food and drinking water for the people who had gathered there.

However, Superintendent of Police, Pulwama, Muhammad Rayees Bhat said that curfew has been imposed in Pulwama, and there has been no large gathering of people in Karimabad.

Meanwhile, amid curfew and the on-going uprising, more than 10,000 aspirants appeared in the common entrance test conducted by the J&K State Board of Professional Courses Entrance Examination (BOPEE) for entrance to MBBS and BDS courses.

The public convention at Dupatyar Islamabad on July 31, 2016. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

The public convention at Dupatyar Islamabad on July 31, 2016. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

The government officials said that 17 centres were established for the test. The administration had made special arrangements to provide transport to candidates for reaching the venue of the test. All the centers were fixed in safer areas of the city to ensure smooth conduct of the test.

Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti and Education Minister visited Government Women’s College here, but they faced a hostile situation as the parents of the aspirants shouted slogans against the chief minister and her government.

The protesting parents said that the presence of the chief minister and her security will disturb the candidates. Soon, the chief minister left the venue.

People offering 'Asr' Namaz on a road in Kanelwan area of South Kashmir. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

People offering ‘Asr’ Namaz on a road in Kanelwan area of South Kashmir. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

Meanwhile, the separatists, including both factions of the Hurriyat Conference led by Syed Ali Geelani and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, respectively, and the JKLF led by Mohammad Yasin Malik, have extended the on-going protest up to Friday. They have also called for a march to Hazratbal (shrine) on Friday.

The on-going uprising erupted on July 8 when popular Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani was killed in a brief gunfight in Kokernag, in Islamabad district.



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#Day23: NC’s Iftikhar Misgar Publicly Resigns From Party?

Aakash Hassan/Shah Hilal

ISLAMABAD

Iftikhar Misger

Iftikhar Misgar

A unionist politician on Sunday evening publicly announced his resignation from his party.

Iftikar Hussain Misgar, who recently fought against CM Ms Mehbooba Mufti in By-polls of Islamabad, publicly resigned from National Conference. “I have nothing do with Unionist politics now,” he told a gathering in Cheeni Chowk.

Misgar is a businessman. He has fought two elections on NC ticket. However, same is being denied by National Conference.

Local reports said that Misgar’s resignation was also announced from the loud speaker of Jamia Masjid Islamabad.

Kashmir is witnessing a renewed mass uprising since July 09, 2016. Mass protests were triggered by the death of popular militant commander Burhan Wani who was killed by forces along with his two associates in Kokernag area of South Kashmir on July 08, 2016 evening.

After several attempts to contact Misgar failed, Kashmir Life spoke to NC state spokesperson, Junaid Azim Mattoo, who said, “the house of Iftikhar Misgar has been attacked by a mob. He has not resigned but such reports have been spread by the mob only.”

An NC lawmaker from South Kashmir, who wished to remain anonymous, told Kashmir Life, “yes, Iftikhar Misgar has publicly said that he has deserted NC but our reports say that he was under pressure from some locals.”

In the on-going uprising “against the establishment”, South Kashmir has remained an epicentre. People are taking out pro-freedom rallies and holding mass demonstrations.



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#Day23: 10k Valley Candidates Appear in CET

KL NEWS NETWORK

SRINAGAR

Amid mass uprising in Kashmir valley almost 10,000 candidates Sunday appeared in the Common Entrance Test (CET), for pre-medical and pre-engineering degrees.

An official of the Board of Professional Entrance Examination (BOPEE) told Kashmir Life that out of the 11,881 candidates; 10,803 appeared in the test.

The test was conducted at various centers, he said.

BOPEE had established 17 centres in Srinagar for the tests.

Earlier in the day, Chief Minister Ms Mehbooba Mufti visited Women’s college Srinagar to take stock of the arrangements. She was booed out by the parents who were accompanying their wards for the tests.

16315 candidates out of 17937 candidates appeared in the test across J&K at 25 examination centres.

Notably, government had made arrangements for the CET aspirants to reach the examination centres across Kashmir.

In South Kashmir’s Pulwama district, candidates were even ferried in ambulances. A top official from the district administration said that DC, Muneer ul Islam ferried candidates in his own car.



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#Day23: ‘United For Cause’, Peoples Convention Moves To Another South Kashmir Area

Aakash Hassan

ISLAMABAD

The public convention at Dupatyar Islamabad on July 31, 2016. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

The public convention at Dupatyar Islamabad on July 31, 2016. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

A huge pro-freedom conference was held at Dupatyar, Docheni Pora belt of South Kashmir’s Bijbehara on Sunday.

Different leaders of Hurriyat Conference, JKLF, Ahl-e-Hadith, Sout-ul-Awliya, Jama’at-e-Islami, were present at the conference attended by hundreds of people.

Sunday’s public convention is one of the several conventions being organized by people from various sects. It was on Saturday that leaders of these sects came forward and held a big convention in Kanelwan village of Islamabad district.

Last Monday, these groups had organised a conference in the most populous village of Islamabad at Marhama.

On Sunday, while speaking on the occasion, Hurriyat Conference (g) Secretary General (II), Gh Nabi Sumji, mocked at former Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed saying “he betrayed us most”.

“I was very close to him (Mufti Sayeed) and have never seen such a clever person. He deceived and inflicted most of pain on us,” said Sumji.

The leaders at Dupatyar convention. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

The leaders at Dupatyar convention. (KL Image: Shah Hilal)

While referring to Chief Minister Ms Mehbooba Mufti, he said, “her real face is visible now and that emotional cover won’t work. She used to visit militant families and had made tall promises but then killed them one by one.”

Mocking at the other unionist parties he said, “what will they say? Blood of innocents is yet on their hands.”

He asked people to be peaceful and refrain from violence and follow the resistance schedule “in letter and spirit”.

Youth with pro-freedom placards, masks on their faces, raised, “tum kitnai Burhan marogai har gar sai Burhan niklai ga” slogans.

The speakers asked people to raise alarms on “finding any danger in the village”.

The leaders who addressed the conference organization gave a proper schedule under which different rallies will be held in major villages in coming days. “It will spread to all parts of Kashmir.”

Meanwhile in Kulgam, a bike rally was held by youth with green flags from Mohamed Pora via Bugam, Frisal, Redwani, Pomai, avoiding army installations.

Another major rally was held in Danew Bugam by Tehreek-e- Hurriyat in which hundreds of people participated.

In the rural areas of South Kashmir such rallies and bike shows have frequented from past few days and are being scheduled in large numbers.



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