Checking civilian movement in Srinagar on Friday
By Ajai Shukla
Loragam, Tral, J&K
Business Standard, 8th July 17
On Saturday, the spotlight on the civil
uprising roiling Southern Kashmir will shift temporarily to the improbably
beautiful Loragam village, nestling in the foothills of the snow-clad Pir
Panjal mountain range.
This was the home of Burhan Wani, the young
Hizbul Mujahideen commander whose videotaped exhortations to fight India made
him a star amongst the social media-savvy Kashmiri youth, and a prime target
for Indian security forces. Wani met his end exactly a year ago, on July 8,
2016, cornered by the Jammu & Kashmir Police (JKP) in a cordon in nearby
Kokernag.
File photograph of former Hizb commander, Burhan Wani
His funeral the next day was attended by
tens of thousands of inflamed locals, even by the most conservative JKP
estimates. It triggered an outpouring of public violence in which JKP outposts
were razed to the ground, 90-100 civilians shot dead by security forces and
thousands injured, many of them blinded by shotgun pellets.
It has also set the pattern for civilian
confrontation of armed policemen and soldiers. Today unarmed villagers
routinely gather at gunfights between security forces and militants, pelting
rocks at soldiers to allow the militants to escape.
Driving to Loragam through the sylvan
Pulwama district, it is evident the security apparatus will not allow Wani’s
death anniversary to become occasion for a public rally that inflames the
situation further. At regular intervals we are stopped at check-posts manned by
the JKP, or the army’s Rashtriya Rifles, and allowed to proceed only after
proving we are journalists.
The roads are near-empty anyway, after
three local militants were killed on Tuesday in an encounter near Pulwama. One
of them, Jehangir, was reportedly buried by thousands of mourners at his
village, Keller. This is now routine for every militant killed, with his life
celebrated in YouTube videos that are watched feverishly on Facebook and
WhatsApp.
“Slain militants become living legends on
social media. And the celebration of their sacrifice attracts more youngsters
to take up the gun”, explains a local youngster who is guiding us to Loragam.
Reaching the village, we make our way to
the local secondary school, where the principal is Burhan’s father, Muzaffar Ahmed
Wani, a courteous, grey-haired man who has just returned from the police
station.
“They asked me what I was planning for
Burhan’s death anniversary. I said ‘Nothing, I plan to stay at home. But what
can I do if people come to condole? I can’t tell them to go away.’
A knot of people gathers around us. There will
be no crowds on Saturday, one predicts, given the security preparations. “There
will effectively be a curfew that day across South Kashmir”, he says.
Going around Pulwama district, it becomes
clear that, notwithstanding the “azaadi” (freedom) slogan that echoes through
rallies, local allegiance is overwhelmingly towards Pakistan, rather than to Kashmir
independence, as is widely believed in New Delhi.
“‘Azaadi’ is a concept confined to the
seminar circuit in India”, scoffed a local youngster who sought anonymity.
“Take a look at any political rally and you will see only Pakistani flags. When
a militant is killed, his coffin is wrapped in the Pakistani flag. Kashmiris
have a deep sense of gratitude towards Pakistan.”
Today, Pakistan’s hold over the Kashmiri
youth faces a new challenge. A short drive from Loragam is Noorpura, the
village of Zakir Rashid Bhat, popularly known as Zakir Musa. Breaking from the
secessionist movement’s traditional leadership – the Hurriyat Conference – Musa
has advocated Kashmiri allegiance to an Islamic State.
Diverging from the pro-Pakistan Hizbul
Mujahideen and Lashkar-e-Toiba, Zakir Musa’s video messages advocate allegiance
to a Khilafat (Caliphate), where the Nizam-e-Mustafa (the Prophet Mohammed’s
law, or Islamic law) prevails.
This week, apparently piggy-backing on
Burhan Wani’s death anniversary, a new Musa video claims that Wani too had advocated
the same message. However, while Wani had indeed issued pro-Khilafat and
Nizam-e-Mustafa calls, he had remained, till the last, a Hizbul Mujahideen
commander.
The threat of a new Islamic State has galvanized
other constituencies. New Delhi cites this as evidence that Kashmiri separatism
is not a “nationalist” movement, but rather linked with global terrorism
movements like Daesh.
“How long will we remain in denial? When
the first Islamic State flags appeared, it was called an aberration. When
videos appeared, they were termed exceptions! It is high time we accepted that
the global jihad is here”, says a senior J&K policeman.
After an encounter in Pulwama on June 22,
security forces released an audio recording in which a trapped terrorist, Majid
Mir, was prompted by Zakir Musa to express his last wish as – only Islamic
State flags at his funeral, not Pakistani flags.
Musa is also a threat to the established
secessionist leadership like the Hurriyat Conference and the Pakistan Occupied
Kashmir-based United Jihad Council, led by Hizbul Mujahideen chief Syed
Salahuddin, for whom a trans-national Islamic State is anathema.
“The Hurriyat has never made Kashmir a
Hindu-Muslim issue; and we have taken an official stance against turning
Kashmir into a Khilafat. But Kashmiris cannot ignore the shrill anti-Muslim
sentiment from New Delhi, including from the electronic media – beef ban lynching,
love jihad, anti-Muslim statements by the ruling party. All this garners
support for Zakir Musa and others like him”, says Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, a top
Hurriyat leader who is the Valley’s most respected cleric.
Presiding over this disarray is Chief
Minister Mehbooba Mufti, whose People’s Democratic Party (PDP) has lost popular
goodwill by entering into a political alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP) after the 2014 elections.
“In 2002, the PDP had effectively snatched
political ground from the separatists through its quasi-separatist agenda. After allying with the RSS-powered BJP, it
has lost that constituency to the ‘resistance’ leadership again. That is why
South Kashmir, which was the PDP’s bastion, has become the epicentre of the
popular agitation”, says Shabir Hussain, Editor Kashmir Newsline.
If this is a reality --'When a militant is killed, his coffin is wrapped in the Pakistani flag.' - We need to fight Pak and not China. What's wrong with us? It must be Doval + Modi idea, because one doesn't hear of Sushma Swaraj even in the passing when foreign affairs are being discussed.
ReplyDeletestop your obsession with the BJP and anti-Modi stuffs and please can you start writing as a responsible military scholar rather than an ordinary journalist!!
ReplyDeletesurprised to see you have not written on PM's Israel's recent trip or Kulbhushan Jadhav's episode?
I think it is press like you guys who give these people oxygen.
ReplyDeleteFor a change why don't you write what should the dysfunctional state government do to ensure development.
This alone is the solution to kashmir's youth.
Why do you post his photo? It seems you are also milking the opportunity and reminding everyone, which is unnecessary. You could have written this article and conveyed the message without explicitly naming him and not giving additional credence to the faux reasoning behind future crisis. Perhaps a little nuanced approach is required, as your pen is mightier than a gun.
ReplyDeleteNSR says ---
ReplyDeletePlease can you kindly stop glorifying all these militants and start writing about ethnic cleansing of Pandits, Gujjars, Sikhs, Chrisitans, etc on this kind of days...
It is high time for the government to stop giving back the Indian and Pakistani militants bodies for funeral...
It is bad idea to give them a chance to glorify and lynch and disrespect Indian police...
Government must immediately abolish Article 370 so people, jobs, development, etc moves to J&K and reduces the influence of militants...
Stop cross-LOC trade immediately...Pakistan is using every good will gesture to inflict more cuts on Indian citizens...
Please kindly stop writing glorifying articles about militancy and militants...instead write about how ethnic cleansing affecting the lives of rightful residents who are living in camps...
Do not be an arm-chair journalist...Go to those camps and write stories...
Hey Ajay. Came back to your blog after a while.
ReplyDeleteAm fondly remembering the coverage you did on indigenous arms development. The details about Tejas and LCH. The exposes and strong advocacy of Arjun.
That was the real stuff. The stuff no one talks about. Coz it's boring. Coz channels don't want to debate it.
Have you also given up?