Thursday, 3 November 2011

How a nation was raped? Tales from Kashmir that hit the core of my heart.



It dates back to the chaddeee days of my grandpa. I wont be talking about those past events, they will put Indians to shame. I will be talking about the more recent developements.


Kashmir is sometimes refered to as "Heaven on earth". Different titles given by different people. The world’s best saffron grown here and in the middle of those saffron fields is a Army Camp. The largest fresh water lake of Asia is in Kashmir – The Wular Lake. Adjacent to it is an Army Camp. Jahangir loved this place, now known as Verinag. A beautiful mughal garden, the source of river Jehlum. Half of it under military occupation (they are vacating though). Kokernag, the biggest spring in Kashmir, half of it under Army. The Almond orchards of the “HIGH GROUND”, completely under army control. Sher Bagh, a spiring in Islamabad district of Kashmir, surrounded by Army Camp. Lal Chowk, the hub of Srinagar city, home to an Army Camp. After the AFSPA was launched these army men didn’t even spare private toilets. You spit anywhere, at random, and you spit at an Army Personnel, such is their density in Kashmir. Doesn’t matter much though.


This nation, Kashmir, has been raped time and again by Indian troops. Be it the Tengpora massacre or the Zakoora massacre, the Gawkadal Massacre or the Sopore massacre. Be it the Bomai killings or any other fake encounters, rape rape everywhere. (Read my artng though). Kokernag, the biggest spring in Kashmir, half of it under Army. The Almond orchards of the “HIGH GROUND”, completely under army control. Sher Bagh, a spiring in Islamabad district of Kashmir, surrounded by Army Camp. Lal Chowk, the hub of Srinagar city, home to an Army Camp. After the AFSPA was launched these army men didn’t even spare private toilets. You spit anywhere, at random, and you spit at an Army Personnel, such is their density in Kashmir. Doesn’t matter much though.


“These killings aint random, this is an organised genocide”.


In the last 11 years, over 2000 people, between the ages of 10 and 70, have disappeared from the Kashmir Valley after they were allegedly picked up by the security forces. They have left behind desperate families who have tried everything to trace their dear ones, but to no avail. Consider these:


* Zahoor Ahmed Sofi. Arrested on August 8, 1994, by 15th Battalion, BSF. Petition filed under 491-CrPC no.20/99. Still missing.


* Mohammed Rafiq Bhatt. Arrested on August 19, 1992, by BSF. Petition filed under 491-CrPC No.19/99. Still missing.


* Mushtaq Ahmed Khan. Arrested on midnight April 13/14, 1997, by 20th Grenade Army C/O 56 APO. Petition filed under 491-CrPC No. 15/99. Still missing.


It was June 27, 2000 that some 300 Muslim refugees from Indian-controlled Kashmir have crossed into the Pakistani side of the disputed territory after being beaten and threatened by Indian troops. The refugees said they had been abused for several days and eventually threatened with death unless they left their village about three kilometres (two miles) from the unofficial border between the Indian and Pakistani sides.


"We were scared that we were going to be killed so it was better to get across to a Muslim area," said 24-year-old mother of one Kulsoom Begum, from the village of Tarkundi. "It was a collective decision to leave by the whole family."


Another refugee told how he brought his wife and one-year-

old son across the Line of Control after being beaten repeatedly for several days by an Indian officer.


"They said that they would set everything on fire and we would have nothing to eat but dust unless we left the village," said 25-year-old Zakir.


"We had to leave everything behind except the clothes we were wearing."


Local Pakistani military commander Colonel Rizwan Ali Khan said 284 people from 51 families had crossed so far and would be taken to a refugee camp near Kotli, 120 kilometres (72 miles) south of Muzaffarabad.


This aint the end MARWAL (PULWAMA), May 8, 2000, A shroud of fear had enveloped the village. The houses were all bolted from inside, even the windows are shut. Women do not venture out alone even during the day, 10 years have passed. Two men from the nearby Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) camp barged into the house of Abdul Rehman Dar and raped his 40-year-old housewife. The Dar household is still to recover from the shock. His wife, a Bengali, had come to Kashmir eight years ago as the bride of Abdul Rehman, who works as a labourer. "I had never imagined this will be my fate here," she says. The villagers who have assembled in front of her house are restless. She asks them to keep quiet. "Let me talk. I want to tell my pathetic story. Somebody will definitely listen to me," her voice is choked with pain and anger. Chill buddy AFSPA is at their backing you cant do anything.


"Aag lagao. Mere ko dead body chahiye". This is how J. K. Sharma Additional Deputy Inspector General of Police (DIG), Commandant of Border Security Force's 75th battalion, is to have told his men before they shot nine innocent civilians


in cold blood in Mashali Mohalla, Srinagar district, on August 6, 1990. Now the BSF court of inquiry is drawing to a close. This will be the first court martial of its kind and E N Rammohan, Director General of the BSF, says the final orders against the DIG and others, will be issued later this month. (Buddies this is from the Indian Express dated 2, july 1998).



Mashali Mohalla was resounding with the wails of hysterical women and children. Mehbooba, one of the widows of Mashali Mohalla, told the court of inquiry that she first heard the sound of vehicles screeching at her door and some men shouting, "Pakistani Kutto, Bahar ajayo" (Pakistani dogs, come out). After this she heard sounds of rapid-fire and the shattering of windowpanes. Her husband, Bashir Ahmed Baig, 60,was sleeping by her side. Within minutes, the door was broken down and the BSF Jawans stormed in. They pulled off her clothes. In the meantime, she heard shots in the other room. Her youngest son, Izaz, had hidden himself under a table and was dragged out. One of the BSF men shot him too. Mehbooba ran to other room to find her husband, older son Muzzafar and a guest Abdul Rehman, all bleeding from bullet-injuries. Ten minutes later, a turbaned BSF officer returned. Seeing a new face in uniform, Mehbooba ran wailing to him, only to be shot at on the left side of her chest. She wrapped a quilt around herself and lay near the body of her husband. Her youngest son died on the way to the hospital. Abdul lived to tell the tale though he lost his left eye. The house was then set on fire. Tasleema, the other Mashali Mohalla widow, has also given a graphic account of the massacre at the hands of the BSF. She has stated that the BSF personnel came to the first floor of her house and opened fire. She hid under the bed when she was pulled out by a BSF jawan, who ripped her cloths and tried to force himself on


PAMELA CONSTABLE writes for The Washington Post, June 21, 1999 her. It was the whistle from DIG Sharma a signal to end the "operation" which Tasleema says she her self heard, that saved her from further humiliation. She stepped out only after the firing stopped to see the bodies of her father, Ghulam Qadir Magloo, and her two brothers, Mushtaq and Ahmed Magloo, lying on the ground, riddled with bullets. By their side was their neighbour, Farooq Baig. All of them were dead. The youngest witness for the BSF's court of inquiry is Baby Jaan, Farooq Baig's 15 year old daughter. She told the court of inquiry how the Jawans attempted to molest her when she was cowering under the bed. A BSF officer pulled her out but disgusted with her hysterical screaming, cut open her right cheek with a knife, spat on her and left.


Khargam - India: Until Tuesday, this was a prosperous village of brick and cement houses. Women and girls worked looms in shady yards, weaving carpets for export. Men tended apple orchards, rice paddies and plump milk cows.



Today Khargam is a heap of charred rubble, silent except for the sound of women wailing. Outside, families squat among their ruined possessions: scraps of flowered carpeting, piles of blackened cooking pots. Inside their sheds lie the corpses of incinerated cows.


According to authorities, the annihilation of Khargam was the consequence of "cross-fire" between Muslim separatist guerrillas and Indian security forces. According to villagers, it was an act of vengeance by army and police who sealed off the village, found and shot two guerrillas, torched the community with kerosene and kept watch while it burned for hours.


The incident was not the first of its kind in Kashmir, a scenic but heavily militarized region that is the subject of a decades-old dispute between India and Pakistan and the site of a long-smoldering guerrilla conflict that has caused some 700,000 Indian troops to be stationed here. But it was an especially gruesome example of how the latest flare-up of tensions over the region - a three-week battle in the Kargil mountains 100 miles east of here on the Line of Control separating Indian and Pakistani-Occupied Kashmir, has revived an array of regional problems that m

ost Kashmiris hoped they were finally putting behind them.


The News International, Jan 03, 2001

Indian forces have burnt down historical Jamia Masjid in Kishtwar, a town in Doda south of occupied Kashmir. The mosque was gutted in fire during the intervening night of January 1-2 when the whole town was under curfew.


According to Kashmir Media Service, the gruesome event triggered strong protest demonstrations and people raised slogans against India and in favour of Kashmir's liberation. According to eyewitnesses, the Indian forces prevented fire-fighting trucks from extinguishing the fire.

Add the following to it….


The burning of the 700-year-old Shah-e Hamdan shrine in Tral, Indian occupied Kashmir, on December 16 was no accident. This was the third 'accidental fire' that has destroyed an important Islamic monument in Kashmir.


In May 1995, the 600-year-old shrine at Charar-i Sharif was destroyed by what the Indian occupation forces described as 'cross-firing' with a group of mujahideen who allegedly had taken shelter there. No mujahid was found when the shooting stopped. Three years earlier, the library at Srinagar's main mosque was set ablaze. A large number of priceless manuscripts were destroyed.

After the Shah-e Hamdan fire, home minister in the Kashmir puppet administration, Ali Mohammed Sagar, was quoted by the AFP on December 20 as saying that the government would investigate the cause thoroughly, adding: 'We have nothing to hide.' The people of Kashmir have no faith in such pronouncements who consider the Farooq Abdullah administration as unrepresentative and a puppet of Delhi.



India, which claims to be the 'largest democracy' in the world, has drawn an iron curtain around Kashmir. Human rights organisations, especially Amnesy International, have been barred from entering the state since 1978. Even so, reports have trickled out painting a grim picture. Freedom House, a New York-based non-profit organisation, described on December 21 India's occupation of Kashmir as the 'worst of the worst' where basic human and political rights were denied to the people. In its annual report on Kashmir (December 1997), Human Rights Watch/Asia said that since the induction of the Abdullah government, there has been a marked 'increase in extrajudicial executions,' in Kashmir.


Brutalities in Kashmir have also been condemned by Indian human rights groups. The Andhra Pradesh Civil Liberties Committee, Hyderabad; Committee for the Protection of Democratic Rights, Mumbai, and Peoples Union for Democratic Rights, Delhi, issued a stinging rebuke of Indian forces' practices in Kashmir following a visit to the state by their fact-finding team last year.

The Indian team was particularly scathing in its attack of random killings of civilians by the occupation forces. Their report listed a large number of incidents in which innocent civilians were simply grabbed and shot dead. The purpose behind such brutality is to terrorise the civilian population. An even more insidious practice is the burning alive of innocent people by Indian-backed militants. On December 12, Bashir Ahmed Ganai, a 17-year-old youth, from Sundo village near Achabal, was burned to death by Indian-sponsored militants.

World press on Indian atrocities in Kashmir:


"As the conflict in Kashmir enters its fourth year, central and state authorities have done little to stop the widespread practice of rape by Indian security forces in Kashmir. Indeed, when confronted with the evidence of rape, time and again the authorities have attempted to impugn the integrity of the witnesses, discredit the testimony of physicians or simply deny the charges everything except order a full inquiry and prosecute those responsible for rape". (Asia Watch and Physicians for Human Rights, May 09, 1993)


"Since January 1990, rape by Indian occupation forces has become more frequent. Rape most often occurs during crackdowns, cordon and search operations during which men are held for identification in parks or schoolyards while security forces search their homes. In raping them, the security forces are attempting to punish and humiliate the entire community." ('Pain in Kashmir: A Crime of War' issued jointly by Asia Watch and Physicians for Human Rights, May 09, 1993)

"By beginning TV cameras and prohibiting the presence in Kashmir of the International Red Cross and of human rights organization, the Indian authorities have tried to keep Kashmir out of the news." (`Kashmiri crisis at the flash point', The Washington Times, by columnist Cord Meyer, April 23, 1993)


"Despite pressure from League of Human Rights and other humanitarian organizations the Indian forces have not desisted from using torture and sequestration of political opponents and using methods that defy imagination." (Le Quotidien de Paris, September 05, 1992)

"(On February 23, 1991), at least 23 women were reportedly raped in their homes at gunpoint (at Kunan Poshpora in Kashmir). Some are said to have been gang-raped, others to have been raped in front of their children ... The youngest victim was a girl of 13 named Misra, the oldest victim, name Jana, was aged 80". (Amnesty International, March 1992)


"The most common torture methods are severe beatings, sometimes while the victim is hung upside down, and electric shocks. People have also been crushed with heavy rollers, burned, stabbed with sharp instruments, and had objects such as chilies or thick sticks forced into their rectums. Sexual mutilation has been reported". (Amnesty International, March 1992)

"Widespread human rights violations in the state since January 1990 have been attributed to the (Kashmir) Indian army, and the Paramilitary Border Security Force and Central Reserve Police Force." (Amnesty International, March 1992)


"The term "rape of Kashmir", is no exaggeration. India's Hindu and Sikh forces have adopted a concerted policy of raping Muslim women which is designed to break the will of the Kashmiri resistance... The world community should immediately bring political and economic pressure on India to stop behaving like a Mongol." (Eric Margolis, Sunday Sun, April 12, 1992)

"The worst outrages by the CRPF (Central Reserve Police Force) have been frequent gang rapes of all women in Muslim villages, followed by the execution of the men". (Eric Margolis, The Ottawa Citizen, December 8, 1991)


"While army troops dragged men from their homes for questioning in the border town of Kunan Pushpura, scores of women say they were raped by soldiers....a pregnant Kashmiri woman, who was raped and kicked, gave birth to a son with a broken arm." (Melinda Liuin, Newsweek, June 24, 1991) [Anthony Wood and Ron MaCullagh of the Sundav Observer (June 02, 1992) estimated that over 500 Indian army men were involved in this orgy of rape and plunder in Kunan Pushpura.]

"The security forces have entered hospitals, beaten patients, hit doctors, entered operating theaters, smashed instruments. Ambulances have been attacked, curfew passes are confiscated." (Asia Watch, May 1991)


"Sexual molestation, beatings, threats of violence, and electric shock are the most common forms of torture. " (Asia Watch, May 1991)


"Jammu and Kashmir is almost the only part of India where demands for democracy and human rights and protest against corruption and administrative injustices were branded as treason. If a deliberate experiment had been launched, under controlled and most favorable conditions, with Kashmir as a laboratory, to implement a textbook model of terrorism, it could hardly have improved upon the present situation." (Hindu observer quoted in Asia Watch report, May 1991).


"Subjugated, humiliated, tortured and killed by the 650,000-strong Indian army, the people of Kashmir have been living through sheer hell for more than a year, the result of an increasingly brutal campaign of state repression. . India hides behind its carefully-crafted image of "non-violence" and presents itself in international forums as a model of democracy and Pluralism. Yet , it is unable to stand up the scrutiny of even its admirers. All journalists, especially television crews, were expelled from the Valley. with no intrusive cameras to record the brutalities of the Indian forces, the world has been kept largely in the dark." (The Toronto Star, January 25, 1991)


"Young girls were now being raped systematically by entire (Indian) army units rather than by a single soldier as before. Girls are taken to soldier's camps and held naked in their tents for days on end. Many never return home....Women are strung up naked from trees and their breast lacerated with knives, as the (Indian) soldiers tell them that their breast will never give milk again to a newborn militant. Women are raped in front of their husbands and children, or paraded naked through villages and beaten on the breasts." (The Independent, September 18, 1990)


These Indiots didn’t even leave sikhs. Yes buddy (may be they were demanding Khalistan). PRESS TRUST OF INDIA


SRINAGAR, MARCH 25: Five top foreign mercenaries, suspected to be involved in the massacre of 35 Sikhs in the Kashmir Valley early this week, were on Saturday killed in a gun-battle with security forces at Panchaltran, 82 km from here, a Defence Ministry spokesperson here said.

All the militants were in combat uniform and involved in the March 20 night massacre at Chattisinghpura village, 70 km from here, in Anantnag district, he said. He said five rifles, two wireless sets and five grenades were recovered from the militants' hideout which was blasted by security forces.


Police did not rule out the possibility of more militants being involved in the encounter as the operation was still continuing.


Acting on a tip-off provided by Mohammad Yaqoob Wagey, who is believed to have taken part in the massacre and was arrested by the authorities on Thursday, the security forces cordoned off the house where the militants were hiding and launched the operation to flush them out ensuing a heavy gun battle between the two sides.


However, the Indian lie was quickly exposed as the Kashmiris and even the Sikhs themselves accused the Indian forces for this heinous act. Rattled by this development, the Indians shot dead 5 Kashmiri civilians in a fake encounter and claimed them to be Kashmiri Mujahideen responsible for killing the 35 Sikhs. However, people protested against this blatant lie and the bodies of these 5 men were exhumed and examined by forensic experts. It was established beyond any doubt that these men were innocent and that they had been liquidated as part of the Indian game plan. It also became clear that the Indian government tried to falsify evidence in order to blame these five men. Thus, the entire world came to know of India's lies with regard to Kashmir.


For a detailed account of what really happened, read Valley of Death, an article written by Pankaj Mishra.

The best way to do it. Yes indians have discovered it. Indian army patrols looking for mines and booby traps in troubled Kashmir have found the safest and most effective way to conduct their dangerous searches -- get a civilian to do it.


Abdul Hamid, 16, steps gingerly into a large hole along an isolated stretch of the Rajouri-Poonch highway, around 200-km northwest of the Kashmiri winter capital Jammu. Clad only in a pair cotton trousers and a T-shirt and carrying a wooden stick, Hamid's figure cuts a striking contrast with the small army sapper patrol watching him. The soldiers are dressed in full army fatigues and flak jackets, and carry sensitive metal detectors and semi-automatic weapons. As Hamid hesitates, a member of the patrol points towards the hole with a stick, edging him on. Such scenes are common in Kashmir.


Hamid and his friend, Rashid, 20, remained with the patrol the entire morning, poking into bushes and under boulders along the sides of the highway. The patrols can be seen all over Kashmir, performing their daily check for landmines and other explosives.


Villagers in Poonch and Rajouri say most patrols will force two civilians to accompany them on the routine searches. "Two civilians, usually young men, accompany every 20 odd soldiers every morning to look for landmines or explosives planted by mujahideen," said Muhammad Hussain of Sarankote village. "They have to search along the roadsides, under the bridges and culverts, and behind the heavy rocks," Hussain said, adding that they were rarely given anything more than a wooden axe handle in terms of equipment.


An army officer leading the patrol containing Hamid and Rashid, denied any coercion was used when drafting in villagers for help. "It is with their agreement that we ask locals to accompany us who know the topography of the area very well," the officer said.


Darling, it doesn’t end here. In a charity hostel in Srinagar, young Kashmiri boys pray together. All of them are orphans, their parents have been killed during the ongoing struggle for the right of self-determination, which has resulted in savage Indian atrocities and genocide in the held territory. They are just a handful of an estimated 100,000 children orphaned by the crisis - many of them forced to fend for themselves as child labourers. Kashmiris say some eighty thousand people have been killed during the past eleven years. It was March 30, 2002.

The News International writes on March 30, 2002 Black laws for Kashmiris


Last 13 years have witnessed a rapid rise in human rights violations in Kashmir. The Indian security forces disregarding any fear of international criticism continue to practice their barbaric methods despite the fact that many human rights groups have consistently took notice of these despicable acts. Mary Robinson, United Nations high commissioner for human rights, during her recent visit to Pakistan, described human rights violations in Indian occupied Kashmir as "serious". The US State Department in its annual report on human rights for the year 2001 also expressed somewhat similar views. The report stressed that the Indian security force continued to commit human rights abuses in Kashmir including killing of civilians, excessive use of force, extra-judicial killings, torture and rape.


Most regional sources indicate that more than 81,000 Kashmiris have already sacrificed their lives in pursuit of freedom from Indian rule. Over 102,000 houses and shops have been either burnt or looted. More than 100,000 children have been orphaned and roughly 8,350 women have so far been molested. It is indeed difficult to calculate that how many Kashmiris are missing or hiding but rough estimates put the figure to over 100,000. These figures by themselves paint a horrible picture in Kashmir.


A simple look at the figures certainly lends ample support to Mary Robinson's contentions. It is indeed imperative that an immediate stop is put to such barbaric and blatant violations. It becomes even more pressing when one realises that the Indians have intensified their killing spree following the tragic events of September 11, 2001. Effectively using the cover of international coalition against terrorism, the Indians are killing their own people as they claim that the disputed state of Kashmir is an integral part of India.


To sum it up, here is a tribute which Indians have given us.

Since 1990 - Oct.1996:


* 59 750 Murdered

* 49 000 Murdered by indiscriminate firing

* 550 Burnt alive

* 3 200 Bound and drowned in the River Jhelum

* 4 500 Murdered crossing the cease-fire line


Early 1990's estimate:


* 15 873 Rape cases (reported)

* 934 Women murdered in gang rapes

* 756 Rendered disabled

* 43 390 Men and women held in prison without trial

* 11 600 Youth in torture cells

* 97 654 Burnt houses and shops

* 250 678 Refugees (successfully crossed) in Pakistan (1)

* 30 Schools destroyed

* 189 Schools and hospitals bomb blasted

* 200 Primary school children burnt alive on October 1, 1990

* 358 Hospital Clinics destroyed

* 346 Mosques destroyed

* 358 Children died without treatment

* 66 094 Houses and shops burnt

* 1 480 Cattle burnt

* 1 225 Food burnt (worth in dollars)

* 1 123 Forest burnt (worth in millions of dollars)

* 848 Hospitals and schools burnt


* + Thousands of people dismissed from jobs

And the persecution is still continuing at an ever-increasing rate. In a land where even gatherings of more than four persons is prohibited, everyday is a nightmare; every place is a holocaust. Every family has suffered in one way or another.



I leave it upto you. I don’t have any further words.






Earlier Published As A Note On: Shah Saaib Ahmed Rabbani ·

BAPTIZING THE YOUNG MINDS





By: Irfan Kashmirie



On 2-11-2011 Kashmir Education Initiative observed its Annual Day in Gandhi Bhawan, University of Kashmir. KEI is a volunteer-driven philanthropic organization with an aim to support education of talented and deserving youth who can't otherwise support continuing their education on their own. On the occasion approximately 60-70 students (KEI Scholars) were awarded the scholarships. At around 12:00 noon all the participants were asked to come on dice, introduce themselves, share their thoughts and explain to the audience what they aspire to be.


A lot of students got up to the dice and most of the students wanted to become doctors, engineers, scientists, etc.


A bright kid from one of the backward areas of the valley also went up, introduced himself to the audience and said that his aim in life was to fight Indians for the freedom of Kashmir.


The hall reverberated with cheers and applauds to the young kid. Next was the young girl who aspired to pursue MMBS and a full time “dayee” to spread the word of Allah and organize congregations especially in Medical Colleges / Universities across valley.


Kudos to the young sister. After some time came the turn of another young brother who said that he will work and strive to expel American Zionists and Indians out of Muslim lands in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine, Kashmir, Chechnya, etc. But this did not go well with the organizers and they immediately cautioned the students not to spill it anymore.


And this is how the people at the helm of affairs make our youth/Gen-Next morally bankrupt. The place which is supposed to produce thinkers/philosophers is just busy in molding the brains of the youth. Shame on university administration who suppress the emotions of the youth to keep their political masters happy. The place is supposed to be the hub of revolution / renaissance (like Osmania University Hyderabad) but unfortunately it is doing exactly the opposite of the same.

In another example, class 7 students of DPS Athwajan offered congregational mid day Zuhr prayers in the playground of the school. This came into the notice of the principal and next day a siege was laid in the ground by so called Muslim teachers of the school to prevent students from offering the Zuhr prayer. Most of the students who have kept beard are asked day-in and out to tri m it off or else face the consequences.


It must be borne in mind that no religious activity (including offering prayer) is allowed in the DPS campus right from its inception in the Srinagar. Although, students every now and then break these rules but this does not go well with the school principle and often the students pay price (in the form of fine and mental torture). Isn’t this interfering in the faith?? Why are Kashmiris silent over such issues, why don’t we launch a mass campaign against such cultural and religious aggression?? Or is it that we all have gone materialistic and await wrath from Allah (SWT).


Alhamdulillah these youth have raised some hope that our Gen-Next will be fertile brains and great thinkers/philosophers who will do everything possible to keep their religion as well as Ummah protected. May He guide us to the right path, the path which He has bestowed with His Grace and not of those who earn His Anger? Aameen Summa Aameen.




Democracy Handcuffed

The photographs that have appeared on the front page of many newspapers today along with a story – ‘Kashmir’s handcuffed children’ is an eye-opener for all those who have been made to believe that the government is serious in implementing the confidence building measures (CBMs) announced during last year’s summer unrest as a part of efforts to reach out to the ‘angry’ people especially the youth. Even though chief minister Omar Abdullah before Eid-ul-Fitr had announced general amnesty for about 1200 stone-pelters with much fanfare, not just the youth but even the minors are still being cracked down upon. These photographs of minors are self explanatory. Not only have they been handcuffed, which should across as a shock for those who take pride in calling themselves a part of the world’s largest democracy, some even have torture marks on their bodies. And going by their statements, it is unfortunate that have been meted out treatments that are usually received by the hardened criminals while in the police custody. Take the statement of a sixth class student, Burhaan Nazir of Nalahbundpora Nowshera, for example. He was arrested last week from the streets of Srinagar’s Old City and his statement comes across as a shocker as to how these minors are treated by the police. ‘We were severely beaten in the police station and all we heard from policemen were just abuses,’ Burhaan has remarked while policemen as per the report dragged him back from the court and bundled him into a waiting armored vehicle. ‘They abuse my sisters, tore our clothes. I am afraid they will beat us again in the police station. They even abuse my mother, who is dead,’ he cried as he was bundled into the police vehicle even as his words shocked everyone who was present in the court premises. Other minors have a similar tale to tell of police torture and it belies all the claims of the government that often boasts of exercising restraint while dealing with the ‘agitated’ youth. And even if these minors have been found guilty of stone pelting, this is no way to treat someone who has not attained maturity. In fact, bringing them handcuffed to the court leaves nothing to imagination. These pictures speak for themselves as to how this government treats minors in police custody. True, the government had said it would not withdraw cases against those involved in arson. But then the authorities cannot treat minors in a manner in which adults are treated. And to conceal their shortcomings, the police before the court pretended that they did not the ages of these children who from no angle look like 18 years old. Even the lawyers have objected to the way these minors have been treated as one observed in the report: ‘This is a brute use of force by state and this is beyond any comprehension of any jurisprudence or human rights and I think police stations have turned into tyranny centres.’ The government owing to the pressure from both within and outside the state may have set up a juvenile home in Kashmir recently but these pictures tell a different story. These pictures are truly ‘beyond any comprehension of any jurisprudence or human rights’. And as far as the chief minister’s ‘Eidi’ goes, now Eid-ul-Adha is approaching but it seems the ‘bold’ announcement of last Eid is yet to be implemented the way it should have been. On the contrary there have been more arrests. Therefore, it is time that the government gives up its habit of only announcing these so-called huge CBMs that are never implemented on ground. The government may announce yet another CBM before the upcoming Eid but now it can no longer fool the public with its hollow promises that never see the light of the day. Ironically, now the government ahead of Eid-ul-Adha has turned itself into a sacrificial animal of sorts. It has been trying to give an impression that it wants to do a lot, be it the revocation of controversial Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) or amnesty to the stone-pelters, but it is not allowed to do so by its ‘enemies’. While some leaders of the government continue to blame the opposition and the separatists for its shortcomings, others have chosen to point their guns towards the army and even the centre. Therefore, it is imperative that the government introspects and realize that since it is power, it has to take responsibility for all the issues facing Kashmir and at the same time look for their resolution.





|Kashmir Monitor|

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

Kashmir’s handcuffed children

Inside the court room, when the judge asked the prosecution what their age was. The prosecution replied he had ‘no information’.(Pictures: Shahid Tantray)



The five children looked distraught. Handcuffed, burly policemen hushed them inside the court premises Tuesday afternoon. They looked pale and had visible torture marks. People, many of them lawyers, inside the premises just gazed in distress as the children moved.

Mohsin Majeed Shah was one among the detained minor boys. He had a torture mark on his forehead, right between the eyebrows. His tiny hands cuffed as a policeman pushed him between the groups of men who stood gazing in bewilderment. Mohsin’s mother had waited all day inside the court premises to see her 13-year-old son- a seventh grader at a local school. She says he was arrested last Sunday.It was an emotional tryst between a mother and her son. Both wept and cried. His brother, two years elder to him, also wept. “Look what they have done to Mohsin,” he kept saying.

His mother had brought him fruits and snacks. She cried. Her dirge was unstoppable when she held him in embrace. She kept kissing his forehead, on the torture mark. His family says Mohsin was arrested last week when he left his home at New Colony, Paplpora Noor Bagh, located on the fringes of Old City, to meet his maternal uncle at Rajouri Kadal.

An hour later, his brother called their mother to inform Mohsin was picked up by police and detained at a local police station. Another boy was Burhaan Nazir of Nalahbundpora, Nowshera. A 6th grader, he was arrested last week from the streets of Srinagar’s Old City.

“We were severely beaten in the police station and all we heard from policemen were just abuses,” Burhaan remarked, while policemen almost dragged him back from the court and bundled him into a waiting armored vehicle.

“They abuse my sisters, tore our clothes. I am afraid they will beat us again in the police station,” he cried. “They even abuse my mother, who is dead.” When he shouted everyone around froze for a moment.

He was lodged for the past week at Mahraja Gunj police station and will now be shifted to a juvenile home on directions of the court.The other boys seemed minors, too. One wore a torn cloak. He looked frightened, when he was brought inside and out of the court house.

There was no time to know their name as police rushed them out in hurry and dumped them into a waiting police van.The lawyers, who had assembled in the court premises, expressed shock as the detained children were whisked away.

“It was shocking for all of us to see this. We have for the first time seen boys so young being detained,” advocate Nasir Qadri says.

“They said we have been tortured and clothes have been torn. They have been severely beaten and there were visible torture marks on their bodies,” he remarks.

The police is yet to mention the ages of the boys detained on charges of rioting and arson. Inside the court room, when the Judge asked the prosecution what their age was. The prosecution replied that he had ‘no information’.

“This is a brute use of force by state and this is beyond any comprehension of any jurisprudence or human rights and I think police stations have turned into tyranny centres,” another lawyer, Babar Qadri says.

The state government has been under pressure from human rights groups over the detention of minors in the Kashmir valley.Under attack from human rights groups, it has already made amendments to the Public Safety Act under which minors were booked during the civil unrest last year.Owing to the pressure from both within and outside the state, the government set up a juvenile home in Kashmir recently.


BY: NAZIR GANAIE

Mirwaiz lunches with Radha, PDP leaders


In an interesting political development Huriyat (M) Chairman Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, on Sunday lunched with New Delhi’s Interlocutor Radha Kumar and several other important Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at a lakeside government property outside Srinagar.
Well-placed sources said that a Srinagar based doctor had organized an ‘informal lunch’, for a very select group of people that included Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, Senior PDP leader Muzaffar Hussain Beigh, centre’s interlocutor Prof. Radha Kumar, PDP spokesperson Dr. Sameer Koul, Sandeep Chatto, Dilawar Mir, former Minister Usman Majeed and close Mirwaiz aide Shahid-ul-uslam.
Interestingly the only presence from the government’s side was one of the District Development Commissioner holding charge of a very sensitive district. Sources also said that not a single member from either the ruling National Conference or the alliance partner Congress was invited for the ‘select’ lunch.
“We can’t call it a private lunch. It was held at a government owned club and the invitees were very important personalities. If the idea was that of a hush hush affair, then the lakeside club would not have been a venue”, a top government official told Kashmir Monitor.
Sources added that Mirwaiz had a brief interaction with Radha Kumar, details of which could not be ascertained. The Mirwaiz, sources say, then left the venue earlier than others while as his colleague Shahid-ul-Islam was seen having a long chat with the centre’s interlocutor.
Although brief, but Mirwaiz’s meeting with the top PDP leadership has set the tongues wagging from Srinagar to New Delhi and according to highly placed sources both the National Conference as well as the Congress were trying very hard to find out what exactly transpired between the two opposite groups. However, so far nothing much has been learnt about the details of the meeting.
Sources also indicated that Radha Kumar was trying very hard to get some of the separatists on board for their approval for parts of the report that she has co-authored. Kumar has been supportive of the Chief Minister Omar Abdullah’s demands for AFSPA removal and is now seen to be emerging as the key person for any revival of dialogue between the New Delhi and separatists.

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Open Letter To The People of India By An Indian

By: An Indian


Let us assume India is a great nation. Let us assume values of justice, equality and human dignity are paramount in this country. Let us assume rule of law prevails here. Let us assume India is world’s largest “democracy”. Let us assume Jammu and Kashmir is an integral part of India. Let us assume India and itspeople feel for Kashmiris. Let us assume Kashmiris are not the second class “subjects” meant to be denounced, demonized and condemned. Let us assume India has a free and fair media. And now let us also assume you did not know anything about what your will read below:













Jammu and Kashmir State Human Rights Commission (JKSHRC) has recommended a fresh probe into the case of alleged mass rape of women by army personnel in Kunan and Poshpora villages of the frontier district of Kupwara.


A division bench of JKSHRC has asked the state government to constitute a Special Investigation Team (SIT) headed by an officer of rank not less than an SP to re investigate the alleged mass rape of at least 31 women by army personnel in 1991.
decades ago.

Over two dozen women from the villages had claimed that they were gangraped by army personnel during the intervening night of February 23 and 24 in 1991, leading to a huge outrage across Kashmir.

The commission has also asked the state government to put on trial former Director Prosecution who had sought closure of the case as the perpetrators were “untraceable”. According to the Commission, ex-Director Prosecution had “overstepped his brief” and, therefore, prosecution proceedings should be initiated against him and those officers who had approved his report.

Quoting the report of then district magistrate, the commission said the medical examination of 31 women had confirmed they were assaulted.


JKSHRC has been hearing the case since 2004 and during the last seven years, it recorded statements of 18 victims who testified they were assaulted. JKSHRC has also asked the state government to pay compensation of Rs 2lakh each to the victims of the incident.

As part of a series of reports into the incident was former divisional commissioner of Kashmir and ex-Chief Information Commissioner of India, Wajahat Habibullah. For some strange reason the report was kept confidential, however, part of it was leaked. The leak report stated: “While the veracity of the complaint is highly doubtful, it still needs to be determined why such complaint was made at all. The people of the village are simple folk and by the Army’s own admission have been generally helpful and even careful of security of the army’s officers. Unlike Brig Sharma, I found many of the village women genuinely angry… It is recommended that the level of investigation be upgraded to that of a gazetted police officer”.

Understandably, the facts, reports, recommendations of the officials and grief of victims were lost in the name of “national interest” and concoction of a suppressive jackboot regime. Else, why would the state give up any chance of exposing “well-concocted bundle of fabricated lies” and “a massive hoax orchestrated by militant groups and their sympathizers and mentors in Kashmir and abroad”

as termed by a Press Council report which conducted an “independent investigation” on the insistence of Army into the case. This would have helped in preventing many youngsters from crossing over to other side of LoC for arms training just to return to fight the state. And did I tell you that just a month ago, JKSHRC confirmed the presence of over 2300 unmarked graves in just three districts of north Kashmir and has ordered similar investigation into some 3,000 odd graves that are alleged to be in Poonch and Rajouri districts of Jammu.

The confirmation by JKSHRC has given the rights groups and family members of victims a shot in the arm after the investigation wing comprising SSP rank officer submitted its report. There are around 8,000 people, who families and human rights organizations allege, were subjected to enforced disappearance by security forces in the state over the past two decades.

Let us assume that you were deliberately kept insulated from these hard realities. Let us assume that you are hearing the arguments for the first time. The following instances should help you understand things better:

In April 2004, family members of four missing army porters from Jammu received an anonymous letter informing them that their kins were killed by the Army after passing them off as militants. Later, Captain Summit Kohli of 16 Rashtriya Riffles, who happened to be the duty officer at that time in Lolab, committed “suicide” in his camp under mysterious circumstances.

Though family members of the porters have been under the impression that the letter might have been written by Captain Kohli, his mother is still fighting a lone battle claiming that her son was murdered for blowing the lid off the worst kept secret in the security force.

In 2007, at least five bodies were exhumed from graveyards of Bandipora and Ganderbal districts after it was confirmed that they were innocent civilians who were branded as militants and killed by security forces just for gallantry medals. While an SSP rank officer of J&K police and his associates are in jail for almost five years in this case, the army officials who were party to the heinous crime haven’t appeared in the court even once.

In January 2003, security personnel claimed major success by killing five foreign terrorists allegedly responsible for Chhatisinghpora massacre of Sikhs in south Kashmir’s Anantnag district. Later it turned out that those killed were local civilians whose DNA samples were fudged during the investigations. Those involved in the police currently enjoy plum postings while others in the army have questioned the jurisdiction of courts, despite being chargesheeted by CBI.

Let us hope that a country where clamor grows for hanging a person to satisfy the collective conscience of the nation, would react in a sane, enlightened and humane way to prove that this land of Gandhi is not lost in the din of jingoism.