Tuesday, 26 April 2011

I wept- with me wept the Dal Lake

Dal Lake needs no introduction. The most famous and often quoted symbol of Kashmir is in fact the Dal Lake. It would not be wrong to say that most parts of Srinagar city lie in the vicinity of this lake. The crown of kashmir unfortunately is breathing is last. It has shrunk to almost one sixth of its original size. Human greed, callous authorities and criminal neglect by all residents of kashmir have brought it almost to the point of being consigned to the dustbin of history. Kashmir is the only place on earth where lake dwellers have filled the lake over the years and have earned legal rights too.They are being compensated for plunder and enchroachment of public property and national treasure. The level of pollution in the Dal lake is now beyond definition by any statistics. While token protests and half hearted attempts have been going on, radical measures are warranted. Swift and abrupt end to the floating gardens. should be the first priority. They are the most convenient and frequently used way of enchroaching the lake. Demolition of all habitations within the lake which have no legal basis. Lake dwellers have rights to live in boats and not in houses within the lake.Limiting the number of house boats and ensuring that each one is fitted with latest sewage treatment facilities. Stopping all sewage from flowing into the lake.

It may seem to be a tough ask. Yes it is. But it is not only Dal lake but the kashmiri nation which is dying.We have to race against time to save ourselves by salvaging the Dal lake. When Delhi, a city of 15 million can transform its whole public transport within a few months, why cant we do something about our priceless treasure. Delhi is the first city in the world which has less polluting fuels for whole of its public transport system. We should Invite foreign consortia. Fund raising can be done to supplement the funds already earmarked for the lake.Moreover, international financial assistance can also be sought.We can impose a special levy or cess to raise funds over a ten year period exclusively for the conservation of the Dal Lake on the analogy of the education cess to raise funds for Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan at the central level.
Build a system of roads and parks on the whole boundry of the lake. This will put an end to the enchroachment and conserve the lake for posterity. We must wake up.

Tel Bal Nallah


The tel bal nallah is extremely important for the sustainance of Dal Lake. Not only is the water level in the lake regulated by its flow, the breeding of fish thriving in dal lake depends on the nallah to a great extent.The nallah , has unfortunately got badly polluted and is adding to the woes of the lake. Here are a few glimpes of the rot at the mouth of the nallah and the settling basin at the foreshore road.



Cooling off
Telbal
telbal nallah
Telbal
Telbal nallah
Telbal
Telbal Nallah
Telbal
Telbal Nallah
Telbal Nallah
tel bal nallah pollution
Dal Lake Proper

vegetation in Dal
vegetation inDal

enchroach
Dal
Dal
Ducks in the lake
This may soon be a forgotten site.

Foot wear
Foot wear is found floating in abundance in the lake.

Polythene in dal lake
Pollution in Dal Lake

A drain emptying directly into the lake.

Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake

Thick algal blooms have suffocated the lake.

Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Pollution in Dal Lake
Polluted Dal Lake
Polluted Dal Lake
Polluted Dal Lake
Polluted Dal Lake
                    Algal Blooms in Dal lake
Algae in Dal lake
Polluted Dal Lake
Polluted Dal Lake
The Life line of the lake, the countless springs on the shores of the lake which used to nourish the lake are all but dead.They cry for conservation and attention.
dried up springs in dal lake
A spring on the shores of Dal Lake which has dried up and has not been conserved .

Springs feeding Dal lake
This used to be a spring right on the shores of the lake. Now in disuse and damaged.

Springs Feeding Dal Lake
A spring on the shores of dal lake
Springs Feeding Dal Lake
Springs Feeding Dal Lake
Springs Feeding Dal Lake
                   Springs Feeding Dal Lake
Lost Glory
Lost Glory
Sad Sight
Sad Sight
stagnant despair
stagnant despair

Sunday, 24 April 2011

Two top militants killed in Kashmir

Two top Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) commanders in Jammu and Kashmir were killed in the mountainous Banihal region on Sunday after a fierce gunfight with Indian Army and police that lasted almost six hours.

The two commanders, Ayiaz Ahmad Malik alias Abu Musa and Farooq Ahmad alias Zulkarnain, were top Lashkar men in the Pir Panchal mountain range.

Indian Army had been tracking Abu Moosa for more than ten years now. Abu Moosa joined the militant movement at the age of 16 and rose to the rank of Divisional Commander of Lashkar.

The gunbattle began at 1 AM on Sunday and concluded at 6.50 AM (Local Time).

Musa had fought in many battles against Indian forces in the region. He was the brain behind the killing of two Territorial Army soldiers on Dec 31 last year who were involved in espionage activities.

Zulkarnain was active in Shopian belt of south Kashmir and shifted his base to south Pir Panchal area in 2008. He was the Operations Chief of the area.

Since 1989, more than a dozen Islamic militant groups have been fighting for Kashmir's independence from India or its merger with Pakistan. More than 90,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in the conflict with Indian troops often using civilians as human shields.

Thousands of civilians have disappeared in Indian custody. Torture has been widespread and fatal in Indian jails.

Prison Break: 540 Taliban escape from Kandahar Jail

Some 540 Taliban officers and commanders have escaped from Kandahar prison via a 320 metre-long tunnel, Afghan government officials have confirmed to Al Jazeera.

A Taliban official on Monday also confirmed the overnight escape, boasting that the prison break had been "very well-planned" and that it was five months in the making, Al Jazeera's Qais Azimy, reporting from Kabul, said.

According to a Taliban statement the tunnel was not dug by the inmates but by fighters outside the prison.

"Mujahideen started digging a 320 metre-long to the prison from the south side, which was completed after a five month period, bypassing check posts and the Kandahar-Herat main highway leading directly to the political prison," the statement read.

"The tunnel reached its target last night, from where the prisoner Mujahideen were led away through the escape route by three previously informed inmates in a period of four and a half hours, starting from 11:00 pm last night and ending at 3:30 am this morning. Mujahideen later on sent vehicles to the inmates who were led away to secure destinations."

"They all have made it safe to our centres and there was no fighting," Yousuf Ahmadi, a Taliban spokesman, said.

Ahmadi said that 106 were Taliban commanders while the rest were foot soldiers. Kandahar police said they have re-captured eight commanders so far.

The Taliban claim that the prison guards did not notice the escape until four hours after the operation was completed.

The prison in Kandahar typically holds drug dealers as well as Taliban commanders captured by NATO forces, our correspondent said.

If the officials have the correct number for those who have escaped - 540 Taliban commanders and senior officers on the run - then this break will constitute a "big success" for the Taliban.

It is also sure to "have a dramatic effect on the fight against the Taliban in the region," said Azimy.

Security concerns

There have been previous escapes from this prison. In June 2008, Taliban fighters attacked the facility in southern Afghanistan, blasting through its entrance and engaging in a gun battle with police.

Nearly all of the estimated 1,150 prisoners, including some 400 Taliban, escaped, according to Afghan officials.

A Taliban spokesperson said that two suicide bombers blew themselves up near the entrance of the gate to the prison before 30 Taliban fighters attacked and killed 16 policemen.

Kandahar prison was the scene of a mass hunger strike by hundreds of inmates in May, 2008 during which 47 of the prisoners sewed their lips shut after complaining they had been tortured and denied fair trials.

Kandahar is seen as the birthplace of the Taliban movement and the city and surrounding area is scene of some of the worst fighting in Afghanistan.

Source:
Al Jazeera

Islamist Militants fight for Kashmir's freedom

SRINAGAR, FEBRUARY 20, 2010

It is 11:40 am. For last six hours hundreds of Indian Army troops and police counter-insurgent units have sealed off part of a village and nobody is allowed in or out. One of the region's most wanted militant who carries a reward of two million rupees is believed to be hiding in a house in this Warpora village of Sopore in northern Kashmir’s Baramulla district.

The militant believed to be caught in the cordon is Abdullah Ooni – a top Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) commander in northern Kashmir - who has planned and carried out many attacks on the Indian forces in this region including the recent attack on a police patrol in which four Indian policemen were shot dead

Heavily armed troops belonging to Indian Army’s counter-insurgent unit - Rashtriya Rifles (RR) and local police’s counter-insurgent group Special Operations Group (SOG), carrying automatic rifles including heavy machine guns and Kalashnikov rifles, have sealed off all the escape routes.

Acting on an intelligence input, most possibly a tip off from an informer or through surveillance of the communication lines, the army assisted by police had cordoned the village in the early morning. Concertina wires were laid at all the entry and exit points to prevent the escape of the militants.

Troops had already zeroed in on a house where they believed the militants were hiding. The first contact was established at around 6 am, when militants fired half a dozen bullets at the soldiers. In the ensuing confusion and panic created by the gunfire, two local militants managed to escape from the cordon, the policemen on the spot said.

But police and the army believed Ooni was still trapped – and his death would mean that Lashkar has lost one of its best man in the Valley.

Attack carried out by ten LeT militants on Mumbai in November 2008 led to the disruption of the peace process between India and Pakistan. Both the countries have fought three wars over Kashmir, which was divided between them soon after the two nations achieved independence in 1947.

However, many in the Muslim majority Valley of Kashmir see the militants of LeT and other armed groups as freedom fighters and their funerals attract huge crowds of slogan shouting young men who pour in from the adjoining areas.

LeT is one among the many armed groups who say they are fighting for the ‘liberation’ of Kashmir. The other major group is Hizb-ul-Mujahideen – which comprise of mostly local militants as compared to LeT whose cadre is mostly from Pakistan.

Meanwhile, hours of search at the site where the Lashkar commander is believed to be hiding is leading the troops no where and they are clueless about his whereabouts. It is now almost seven hours and their finger has continuously been on the trigger of their Kalashnikovs.

A policeman from the SOG, who identified himself only by his first name Gulzar, said that it is unlikely that Ooni will still be there. “We are looking for him last six hours and there is still no contact with him. Perhaps he has escaped,” said Gulzar, his face covered with a black cloth.

Like most of the SOG personnel involved in this operation, Gulzar too is a local. “We have to hide our identity. Most of the people in this area are hostile to us,” he said, as others in the group nodded in agreement.

As the troops and police search for Ooni, young boys start to gather at the other end of the road. Sensing that the boys might start throwing stones, the SOG personnel act preemptive and charge on them forcing the boys to run away from the cordoned off area.

Most of the boys who were shooed away by the Kalashnikov carrying masked cops belong to a new generation of Kashmiris who were born in the last twenty years - when the insurgency erupted in the state.

Warpora, like most of the Sopore region, has traditionally been a separatist stronghold and, even after twenty years of conflict – and with ‘seventeen martyrs’ from this village alone – the anti-India feeling is widespread.

In last one year alone, there have been eight encounters between Indian army and militants in this village, a boy who refused to give his name said that is because people here are sympathetic to militants. “We all are sympathetic to militants. People are willing to provide them shelter and food. That is why they come here, but there are also many informers around” he said.

Five kilometers from Warpora village is Upper Seer – a village in Sopore and home to a Fidayeen (member of a suicide squad) who on January 6, this year, attacked an Indian police camp and later barricaded himself along with another militant at a Srinagar hotel. Both the Fidayeen were killed after a fight that lasted nearly 23 hours.

Manzoor Ahmad Bhat – a young man who joined the militant ranks after the 2008 land transfer agitation was a Fidayeen – a militant who raids a military installation – with the sole aim to kill and die. It has been rare that Fidayeen have come back alive from these raids and Manzoor was no exception.

Manzoor’s father, Ghulam Rasool Bhat said that they never saw their son after he joined the militant ranks. “He joined the protestors in 2008 who were marching to the Line of Control and when he returned in the evening he was a changed man, something had happened to him that day,” said the father, as tear trickle down his bearded face.

“He then left home saying he is going to Srinagar to work. We gave him the permission. After some days police raided our house and then came the army and the SOG”.

Bhat said that they came to know about Manzoor being a militant when an army officer told him the news. On the first day of the Islamic month of fasting, Manzoor had left his home for ever and joined Harkat-ul-Mujahideen.

Eighteen months after he left the home, Manzoor would die fifty kilometers away from his father and home.

“He never came back home to see us. After that I only saw him when his dead body arrived,” said Manzoor father. Manzoor is among the few Kashmiri militants who have participated in the Fidayeen attacks – which are otherwise mostly carried by the Pakistani militants.

Manzoor’s mother takes out the picture of him from underneath a pile of clothes from a wooden rack. The photo was given to the family a year after Manzoor became a militant and shows a bearded boy in his early twenties. It is now the only souvenir for Manzoor’s family.

In the meantime, it was a lucky day for militants hiding at Warpora. All of them, including Ooni escaped an imminent death. “Operation has been officially called off as there has been no success in locating any militant,” said Station House Officer of Sopore police station, Shakeel Ahmad.

The average life of a militant operating in Kashmir is not long and some day Ooni might be running out of luck. The rules of this game of hide and seek between Indian soldiers and the militants have remained unchanged for the last twenty years, and as of now it is unlikely that the things are going to change.

PS: Soon after the Warpora encounter, militants fought an intense battle with Indian forces in Chinkipora after which Indian forces laid a siege of that village and later shelled the residentail houses. Ooni survived that fight and went on engaging in dozens of battles with Indian forces in Sopore. Today is April 25, 2011. Abdullah Ooni continues to be among the most wanted militants in Kashmir.

"Don't die so soon my son....Oh my beloved son – won’t you miss me,’’


When the boys carry the stretcher through the narrow swampy street, there is rage even in their steps. Suddenly the slogans sound like rhythmic wails. A child watches from a window as an elderly woman holds him tight and then showers almonds and sweets. Few fall on the body, wrapped in a colourful blanket.
It is already dark and the mourners try to find their way, guided by the light of their cell phone torches. Fida Nabi (17) is returning home one last time and his funeral procession is like a volcano of anger, a little confrontation with the security men can trigger a violent protest.


The government has already decided to re-impose curfew after a day of hiatus and now officials are waiting anxiously to know the family’s plan to bury this teenager. Fida had been at the fore front of several protests. Tonight dozens of his teenager friends, assembled from across the downtown city, are seething with anger. Afuneral procession in the day meant trouble so the streets are emptied off police and security men way ahead of time to avoid confrontation. The police officers are encouraging the family to conduct the burial in the dark ofida nabif the night. The local police officer sends a message too. The orders have come from the top and pleas were followed by threats - we won’t allow more than 15 people to accompany the body after the sun rise.

The elders don’t discuss the proposals of the police. They consult each other in whispers. The anger has spilled over the streets and with each passing moment more boys are arriving. There is something very common among Fida’s friends – their eyes are moist, wails hoarse and each one of them carries a large piece of green or black cloth mask covering their heads. For a moment, they act adult and shout political slogans. Then the pain of losing a dear friend reaches its threshold and they cry like little boys. Few are accompanied by mothers too. During this latest wave of mass protests here, teenagers have formed the forward lines of the Azadi groundswell as if the baton of the struggle has been silently handed over to them.The police and CRPF often open fire and they take bullets as well – in chest, neck and head. This real threat of death, however, has not deterred them to come out on the streets.

It is clear that the children born during and after the first uprising of 1990 have finally come of age.

We have seen, heard and felt this war from the time we came to our senses. There are hardly any happy memories.’’ Fida’s friend Nisar (name changed on request) says.

" I have seen the first funeral while I was in my mother’s lap. My mother had to carry me along when I was just eighteen days old. Her cousin had been killed and she couldn’t bear to stay home. Of course I don’t remember it but my mom has repeated even the minutest details of it so many times that it has become an essential part of our family lore’’. He says Fida is his second friend to die in CRPF firing in a week’s time.

Fida’s story is tragic and it has in a way come to symbolise the tale of an entire generation, born in the conflict, during these protests. I dig a bit deeper to know Fida and the picture that emerged fits any regular teenager. He loved trendy clothes, wore a ring for good luck and carried a friendship band around his wrest.

In a photograph clicked by his older brother Aabid recently, he stands as if a model is posing to promote a jeans line. His jet black hair is cropped in style and it seems he has purposely let a few curls touch his left eye brow. He is wearing a golden colour necklace and his white shirt is spotless. But what caught my eye is his casual gaze. Like any 17-year-old, he tried to look hip. "He would never take his necklace off. It was a gift, perhaps,’’ recalls Aabid.

"He was more of a friend than a younger brother to me’’. Aabid says he had recently started wearing a Kuffiyeh – the Arab style scarves that became a statement of resistance after Yasir Arafat popularized it.

"He had seen a friend wearing it and got one too. He loved to do things that would make him stand out,’’ Aabid says. He says he saw him change recently.

"Ever since these protests started, he was restless and angry,’’ Aabid says. "I think he was very sensitive. Whenever a soldier or a policeman would stop us to show our identity cards or frisk us, he would feel angry. He thought they always look (forces) for a chance to humiliate us’’.

On August, 3, Fida had been at home in Usman Abad, a residential colony that has recently come up in the marshy paddy fields in the city outskirts. Eight months ago, his family had shifted from Nawabazar - a congested neighbourhood in politically volatile downtown. The construction of the house was yet to complete but Fida’s parents decided to move in anyway.

They wanted to take their three sons, particularly Fida, away from the downtown. Fida had quit school soon after he had passed the matric examination. Worried, his father Ghulam Nabi – who works as a salesman at a shop - had made him promise to appear in class 11 examination as a private student. He had also given him money to buy second hand clothes and helped him to put a cart in the Sunday Market along the residency road.

Aabid says Fida liked this new arrangement. He would work on Sundays and have all week free for fun. But he couldn’t carry on for too long. Again his father intervened and this time helped him (Fida) to find a salesman’s job at an acquaintance’s shop. "He was working at Sana garments in Safakadal these days,’’ Aabid says.

Once the current wave of protests started, Fida became restless.

"The shop is in the middle of the downtown city. He knew several among the boys who were protesting. His friends had been injured too while protesting. Many of them had been arrested bythe police,’’ Aabid recalls.

"He was there when Tufail (On June, 11, Tufail Ahmad Mattoo (17) who was killed when a policeman fired a plastic pellet straight on his head, killing him instantaneously and triggering this latest wave of protests) was buried’’. The garment shop was shut because of the unrest, but every day Fida would leave home to join his friends in downtown.

"He never wanted to come to this new house. He would tell us that each time he comes to this new house, he feels he has left his heart in those narrow lanes of the old city. He was a boyfrom the old city’’.

Fida seemed to have loved the congestion and mess of the old city - an affection that was not one sided.

That day, he had been playing carrom with his younger brother and few visiting friends at the family’s new house.

"He didn’t like it here in Usman Abad but once we shifted here, he had made few friends in the neighbourhood,’’ Aabid says.

The government had clamped a strict curfew over the city but there were reports that boys were defying it everywhere. Fida had been talking to his friends on phone. His brother Aabid had not come home for a week ever since he had gone to cover protests in Baramulla because of the curfew. Aabid takes pictures for a local newspaper. "I had called home in the morning. He didn’t let me talk to mom properly and snatched the phone from her. He wanted to talk to me. He sounded cheerful,’’ Aabid recalls. "He wanted me to come home. I was insisting even as I told him there is curfew. When I recall that conversation, I feel perhaps he had a premonition ’’.

His mother Zahida Nabi had pleaded with him not to step out. "I won’t let you go out today. It’s scary out there,’’ Zahida recalls.

So he stayed home. At 6.30 in the evening, a large procession had assembled on the main road. Fida heard the sounds of the slogans and couldn’t stop himself. He stepped out, escaping the eye of his mother. The procession was going towards the city. By the time his mother Zahida knew, he had run to join the protest. A large contingent of police and CRPF had already arrived to prevent the protestors to enter the city at Shaltang junction.

"I saw him standing near the parapet. I was about to call him and suddenly there was firing. I saw him holding his face with his hands and then he fell down,’’ Fida’s uncle Mohammad Amin recalls. "A bullet fired by a CRPF men ricocheted off a rock and pierced through his cheek. He was lying there. There was chaos all around and I couldn’t go closer’’. Finally, Fida was picked up and rushed to hospital.

For five days, his mother waited patiently in the corridor outside the Intensive Care ward of Sher-e-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, occasionally slipping in to see him breathe. At 10.15 pm on Sunday, Fida died. The doctor pulled the sheet over his head and walked away silently. "He’s alive,’’ Zahida Nabi screamed, putting her ear close to his chest to hear that little sound of life. Then she pulled her hair and tried to suckle him as if he was a baby. " Wake up my son– wake up – just once. I promise I will never scold you again,’’ she shouted, pleading with her dead son as if to break his sleep.

The family and friends too were around and they rushed to arrange an ambulance to Fida home. "I didn’t know what to do. So I started calling friends,’’ Aabid recalls. "He died. Can you imagine? He is only 17. Have you seen his pictures? He was a handsome boy,’’ Aabid says and breaks down.

"I just wish I had been with him. I want to see him one time the way he used to be. The bullet had disfigured his face. I want to see him smile. Oh God. Why did this happen?’’

Every human being has a measure of protection against pain. I feel I have reached my threshold. For years, I have witnessed blood and gore and felt numb but Aabid’s words pierce through my protective shell. The wails suddenly feel like sharp daggers, slicing through my heart. I didn’t know how to respond and walk away slowly. A few yards ahead, a group of boys are sitting silently in a dark corner. I join them. Their attire suggests they are all Fida’s friends. I am unable to see their faces and gauge the mood. But I start anyway and begin with small talk. They are forthcoming. Perhaps they have seen me talk to Aabid which gives them the confidence. These boys generally avoid talking to reporters. In fact, they detest media and are convinced that their story is always distorted. Did he throw stones? I ask. "Yes but only when the police and CRPF stopped the procession. I do too,’’ his friend, who didn’t give his name, says. "We want Azadi. We shout protest and shout slogans. The police and CRPF don’t like it. They try to catch us and we throw stones’’. He says Fida is a martyr. "His blood won’t go waste,’’ he insists. His voice is hoarse – perhaps he has been shouting slogans for days. I didn’t ask. Although the boys are polite, I can feel the anger.

A few yards ahead, an elderly man tries to convince a large group of angry teenagers to let them bury him (Fida) in the local graveyard. It is evident that the elders feel the situation can go out of control. "They (police and CRPF) won’t allow us even to reach the main road during the day. They won’t let us go all the way to Nawabazar and then to Shaheed Mazar (Eidgah) to bury him. They are saying only 15 people can accompany his body,’’ an elder tells the boys. The teenagers are angry and are in no mood to budge. Their plan is to take the body to Nawabazar in downtown, wait for the sunrise and then take out a funeral procession to the neighbouring Eidgah where they want to bury him in `Behishtay Shohdaye Kashmir’. This graveyard is the biggest in the valley and was exclusively set up for all those men and women who were killed by security men during the last two decades. Hundreds of militants too are buried there.

There is chaos and a few elderly women too pitch in to convince the boys. At one point, the teenagers give in. The elders organize Jinaza, the funeral prayer, in a hurry and the body is taken towards the local graveyard in neighbouring Parimpora. On their way, the boys change their mind and place the stretcher carrying Fida’s body on the Srinagar-Baramulla highway. Minutes ago, an army convoy had passed through and the elders apprehend a clash. After a lot of pleading, the boys agree to bring the body back home.

Fida’s body is placed in the middle of a tent, erected in an empty plot of land, especially for the mourners. Dozens of women encircle it. Soon Fida’s mother Zahida Nabi brings henna to paint the little finger of his left hand – a local custom to prepare a groom before he leaves to the bride’s home. "He is a groom. He is a groom,’’ Zahida repeats. The crowd gets hysterical. And as the blanket is lifted off his face for a final glimpse, a few women shower almonds and sweets on his body. Fida’s mother starts singing dirges in Kashmiri.

"Don’t die so soon my son– your nails are still wet with henna - Oh my friend – Oh my beloved son – won’t you miss me,’’ she sang as everyone repeated.

"Oh my martyr – Oh my martyr, are you thirsty – are you thirsty’’. Soon Fida’s teenager friends start shouting Azadi slogans. Zahida starts franticly hugging Fida’s body. There is a girl, holding Fida’s feet and crying silently. Hours later Aabid tells me, Fida was seeing her. "She is devastated. They have had a little fight that morning and she wouldn’t take his calls,’’ he says. "Now she will never get a chance to talk to him (Fida) again’’.

The police had been consistently sending messages asking not to delay the burial till the morning. Sensing the tension, a group of elders finally yield to the pressure of the boys and decide to quickly arrange for a truck to take the body to Nawabazar. "They won’t let us bury him here. So let’s see what happens once we reach Nawabazar,’’ an elder says. At around 3 am, the funeral procession finally leaves. The city is dark and empty – the security men have retreated to their sand bunkers and camps. The elders, however, don’t take chances and guide the truck through narrow lanes to avoid security bunkers. "We don’t want to even take a slight risk. We are avoiding to pass by any security bunker,’’ says Masood Ahmad, a businessman and a neighbor of the family. "The boys are shouting slogans and if they (security men) react angrily, there will be a massacre’’.

In Nawabazar, the boys jump off the truck and quickly make an announcement over the mosque loudspeaker. A CRPF man walks out slowly to check but returns to his bunker immediately. Soon the residents start waking up and come out in dozens, rubbing their eyes. Another funeral prayer is organized – this time right in the chowk. The security men watch from the pigeon holes of their bunker but don’t venture out. Perhaps, there are orders not to confront the people tonight.

The residents remember him and his four childhood friends, playing cricket in the inner lane on every strike day. Waseem, Bari, Suhail and Basit are all accompanying their bosom friend for his last journey.

"We have met and become friends here. We wanted to bring him here one last time,’’ Waseem explains.

"It means a lot to us. If anyone among was there in his place, he would have done the same’’.

Fida was born here. When he died, every family in Nawabazar wept for him. Even the children have come out in the dead of the night to bid him a final goodbye. "We have carried you in our laps – we have loved you – you were our boy with beautiful eyes – how can you leave us,’’ women wail as they stand in semi circles around the stretcher that carries his body. Fida is a son of a thousand mothers here. Though his father Ghulam Nabi was from Sopore, he had married in Nawabazar and soon left his ancestral home to live in a rented house, near his in-laws.

The boys pick up the stretcher again. Their plan is to keep the body inside the mosque and wait. A local cleric, however, intervenes and pacifies them. Finally, a procession moves towards the Eidgah graveyard.

At 5 am, Fida is buried next to his friend Anees who was killed last week. "He (Fida) had come and helped dig the grave and carry mounds of earth,’’ his friend Waseem recalls. "We didn’t know, he is the next’’.

It is already dawn. The sky over Srinagar is overcast. Within an hour, the soldiers will be again on the streets to impose curfew.

PS: Fida’s friends tried to organize a blood donation camp at his house in Usman Abad neighbourhood but the police didn’t allow the officials of the Blood Bank from SMHS hospital to come.



Courtesy: Muzammil Jaleel for The Indian Express
Source : Bloodied Rivers of Kashmir