As India clamps down on Kashmir with an iron grip, it risks permanently losing the hearts and minds of the people.
By Farhad Shah
Last April, five civilians were shot dead by Indian soldiers in
India-controlled Kashmir, shortly after protests broke out in the aftermath of
the molestation of a young girl by soldiers in Handwara (50 miles north of the
capital city of Srinagar). The attempted sexual harassment had gone largely
unnoticed until the victim spoke to the media, but it was not the first time
that a similar incident had occurred in the heavily militarized region. In
almost three decades of armed oppression against the civilian population,
supposedly a bid to win back trust in Kashmir, many women and girls have been raped and molested by Indian soldiers. Sexual violence
has been used as a channel to impose authority upon the female population,
while torture and killings are used to suppress their male counterparts.
This isn’t the only reason
why a popular civilian uprising is underway in Kashmir as India’s rule grows
weak again. The government’s hold over the territory had strengthened with the help of mass killings in the early 1990s, and later, with the
regional elections held in 1996. In the early 1990s, when India’s grip was weak
and the rebels, as per an India
Today report in
May 1993, had “achieved successes previously unimaginable” and “for the first
time established liberated zones,” a government
militia was instrumental in crushing
popular dissent, leading to the fall of most rebel groups. Currently, there is
one group (other than a scattering of new-formed ones) that is still fighting
in Kashmir and continues to gain power: the indigenous Hizb-ul-Mujahideen, also known as the Hizb. The Hizb has
pro-Pakistan leanings, but most of its cadres are local. In the last few years,
the Hizb has managed to climb to the top in terms of popularity, and continues
to successfully gain new recruits, who are being celebrated as righteous
warriors by the general public.
Even mourning the rebels’
losses is seen as a major political statement in contemporary Kashmir, as
thousands of people join funeral
processions for both local and
Pakistani rebels who died fighting Indian soldiers. During several recent
gunfights, moreover, civilians diverted the soldiers’ attention from the
procession in order to help the rebels escape
unscathed. These trends have alerted Indian agencies. Meanwhile, social media
remains abuzz with many people who idolize rebel commanders, like Burhan
Muzaffar Wani, a 23-year-old Hizb commander in South Kashmir who has become the
face of the new rebellion. Wani’s
brother Khalid was among those killed by the soldiers, and this year, a cricket tournament was organized to remember him, with
team titles dedicated to various rebels. The people’s acceptance of this
rebellion has grown with the decline of any political process that can hope to
empower them.
The change in mood has its
roots in the 2008 and 2010 mass uprisings in Kashmir, during which Indian
troops and police shot more than 200 teenagers dead on the streets. This has
gradually led to major protests, drawing in the younger generation, with people
from all walks of life vehemently rejecting India’s continued rule in Kashmir.
From the army to the local government, the alarm bells are ringing, but no one
has a political solution to solve the long-standing issue. Last month in
Kashmir, a senior official from the government informally told me that the new
generation is angry. “Have you seen how these youths are reacting? They don’t
want to listen to anything. They are serious about it (protesting) and can go
to any extent to achieve their goals,” he said.
Continuous Killings and
Impunity for Soldiers
Like many problems in South
Asia, the roots of the Kashmir issue stretch back to the partition of British
India in 1947. After an aborted attempt at remaining independent, what was
once the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir was divided between the two new
countries of India and Pakistan, with a de facto border known as the Line of
Control.
The armed rebellion against
Indian rule in Kashmir started in the late 1980s. In these years of violence,
around half a million soldiers in the region used extreme torture and
targeted killings against civilians, with hundreds killed in some incidents.
Estimates of the number of people killed in Kashmir range from 70,000 to
100,000.
Force was again used in 2010,
when the political narrative in Kashmir took a different shape as youths took
over the reins of public dissent and rebellion. Two mass uprisings in 2008 and
2010 showed the brutal face of the state to children born during the 1990s, who
had not seen such mass violence spearheaded by the state before. It further
strengthened the younger generation’s anti-India sentiments and brought about a
fresh wave of dissent. The slow growth of young rebels over the last five years
is a product of this phenomenon.
Without a clear
policy-based solution apparent, two laws that have been instrumental in
crushing the recent popular dissent in the Valley: the draconian Armed
Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA), which provides impunity to Indian soldiers
for basically any action, and the Public Safety Act (PSA), which is used to
imprison people without due process. Amnesty International calls the PSA a
“lawless law” and has been campaigning for its revocation. On the AFSPA,
Amnesty International said in its
report in 2015 that the impunity
is a long-standing problem in Jammu and Kashmir. “The lack of political will to
account for past and present actions of the security forces, including the
state police, is fortified by legislation and aggravated by other obstacles to
justice, especially for those who lack financial resources or education,” the report
read.
After the five
civilians were shot dead by
soldiers in Handwara, for example, the state government expressed regret over
the killings, but it did not issue an investigation. The central government in
New Delhi continued its silence, aside from blaming pro-freedom leaders for instigating
the violence.
At the core of the long
weeks of violence was an underage girl, who was subjected to attempted sexual
harassment and was also forced to refrain from speaking to the media while she
was kept under police detention.
Activists accused the police of a forced detention to protect the solider who
had committed the act; there was no clear response from New Delhi.
The girl was released later
and spoke to the media, accusing the police of forcing her to give a statement
that would exonerate the soldiers. “I had gone to a public washroom,” she said.
“When I was coming out, a soldier came and held my hand. I freed my hand and
ran out, weeping.” She demanded that an FIR must be filed against the accused
soldiers and action be taken against the police officers involved in her
detention.
It has been two months now
since the attempted molestation and killings in Handwara, but the government
has not yet produced an investigation report, as demanded by opposition
parties.
Sexual Violations as a Form
of Oppression
Incidents like the one in
Handwara are not the first of their kind. Sexual violence conducted by the
Indian forces has long been a mainstay tactic, with no one prosecuted to date.
Another highly visible episode involving sexual violence occurred in 1991 in
North Kashmir’s Kunan-Poshpora villages, when dozens of women accused
Indian soldiers of rape.
On February 23, 1991,
Indian soldiers had gone to the two villages for a cordon and search operation.
As per various accounts, the soldiers tortured the men and raped the women. The
20-year-old injustice came to light again amidst the swelling public discontent
of the last few years. In 2013, a group of women came together to file a public
lawsuit that called for further investigations regarding the case. Months have
passed since a local court ordered further investigations, but the police have
taken no action.
Essar Batool, one of five
Kashmiri women who co-authored the book Do You Remember Kunan Poshpora?, says
that “the legal procedure in Kashmir is neither transparent and nor
accountable, as it is by extension another arm of Indian occupation.” Batool
says the delay in the legal procedure not only hampers investigations and but
also exposes the true face of the state to the public, who believe the
judiciary will deliver justice.
Batool sees the case as a
way to strengthen the public’s memory, which has supposedly gone fragile
despite years of brutal occupation. “We need to comprehend that the occupier is
changing its tactics, and hence we need proper documentation to keep memories
alive,” she says. “The documentation also contributes to spreading knowledge
about Kashmir and Indian occupation… through the book many people outside
Kashmir and even outside India came to know about the incident in detail only
25 years later.”
New Rebels and a
Strengthened Movement
Earlier this month, rebels
overpowered three policemen and snatched four service rifles from the police in
South Kashmir. Rebels have been using this strategy for the last few years,
taking weapons from the police or paramilitary troops and later giving them to
their new recruits. It also shows the growth of the rebellion as an indigenous
movement, as the border with Pakistan has become less and less porous over
time. The rebels are mainly focusing on their particular areas, mostly in the
south of the Kashmir Valley. But lately some attacks and rebel activities have
happened in North Kashmir and Central Kashmir also. In the absence of any
political solution, the youth have become restless and their anger has
intensified.
The Indian Army has also
started acknowledging the change in the Kashmiri situation. One of the senior
military commanders in Northern India, Lt. Gen. D.S. Hooda, recently told the Associated
Press that soldiers have
little hope of competing against the rebels for public sympathy. “It’s a big
problem, a challenge for us to conduct anti-militant operations now,” said
Hooda. “Frankly speaking, I’m not comfortable anymore conducting operations if
large crowds are around. Militarily, there’s not much more to do than we
already have done … We’re losing the battle for a narrative.”
Growing anti-India
sentiments their counterpart in rapidly rising support for
Pakistan among people in India-controlled Kashimr. Yet the chief cleric of
South Kashmir’s Ummat-i-Islami, Mirwaiz Qazi Yasir, believes that the ongoing
freedom struggle in the Valley is a populist movement. “More than things,
symbols are more important and [the new rebellion] is a symbol,” he says. “Even
if there are no resources, but still this is a symbol.”
However, he acknowledges
that “a long-term rebellion” will find it “hard to survive without resources.”
“If Pakistan wants to help
the movement here, they will have their own interests also,” he adds.
“[...]Pakistan has always tried to show it as an indigenous movement and it is
an indigenous to a large extent.”
Some observers also believe
that Pakistan has changed its approach too, from involving itself on the ground
to becoming the political backbone for the Kashmir issue globally.
This endeavor to advocate
on behalf of the Kashmiri people was evident at recent United Nations meetings,
where Pakistan continuously raised the Kashmir issue, as well as in bilateral
talks with India. As a result, India has declared that Pakistan is
needlessly internationalizing the Kashmir issue.
The situation in Kashmir
may look better compared now to the peaks of violence in the past, but don’t be
fooled: in the heart of the Valley, the rise of anti-India sentiment has
weakened India’s control.
Anti-India forces are
hugely motivated by the extreme force used against dissenting voices by the
newly formed regional government, which brought together the local People’s
Democratic Party and the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party. The new head
of the region’s government, Mehbooba Mufti, recently said that there are only
four bunkers of Indian forces in the Valley – a statement that highly angered
the people, who have to face soldiers and police regularly in their daily
lives. The regional government’s anti-dissent tactics combined with the
disappearance of opportunities to construct a solid political solution to
provide respite to the ordinary people in Kashmir has only made things worse.
Unless India changes tactics — and soon – Kashmir will continue to slip away.
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