Monday 30 September 2019

Modi's All Is Well or New India v/s Real india



Kashmir’s Shia Students Speak Out Against the Loss of State Autonomy

Kashmir’s Shia Students Speak Out Against the Loss of State Autonomy

Kashmir’s Shias feel a particular sense of vulnerability as minorities.
By Tapasya
Kashmir’s Shia Students Speak Out Against the Loss of State Autonomy
Credit: AP Photo/Channi Anand, File

This Muharram was quiet and downcast for the Shias of Kashmir, where processions to mark the occasion of the tenth day of the holiday, known as Ashura, were restricted by authorities. In Delhi, though, Kashmiri Shias joined others in visiting the Shah-e-Mardan shrine in South Delhi’s Jor Bagh area. With almost no communication with their families in Kashmir for around 40 days, the Shia student community of Kashmir compared this Muharram to the oppression that led to the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, in the Battle of Karbala in Iraq in 680 CE.
Sabia*, a student of clinical psychology, was angry that a central expression of the Shia faith was suppressed in the valley after the August 5 abrogation of Article 370 of the Indian constitution, which ended the autonomy of Kashmir. “For Shias, taking out processions is very important for expressing our love towards Imam Hussein as well as for spreading his word. Muharram cannot be celebrated inside homes like Eid can be,” she said, and recalled how Muharram was observed in Kashmir until recently. People would come out of narrow streets and gather to proceed towards Zadibal, an Imam Bara (Shi’ite place of worship) in Srinagar, she said.
Aliya*, sitting beside Sabia and I in a hall at Shah-e-Mardan, could not hold her emotions in at this point. A student of history at the University of Delhi, she said it was her first Muharram away from home. “I have not talked to my mother in 34 days,” she told me, referring to a communication blackout in place in Kashmir since August 5. “I talked to my father a couple of times for around a minute each time. I could not pour my heart out and ask them how they were. When you feel this surveillance, you can’t have deeply personal conversations,” she said, as tears welled up in her eyes.
For Aliya, the link between the Battle of Karbala and the situation in Kashmir is very strong. The battle was fought by Imam Hussein against Yazid I, who was the second caliph of the Umayyad Islamic caliphate, but was considered an illegitimate ruler and a tyrant due to his hereditary succession.
The federal establishment has distanced the Shias from India, the community believes. The position of Shias as a minority within the Sunni majority Muslim community of Kashmir has led to their voices being ignored in Kashmir’s struggle for independence, feels Aliya.
“The oppression of Shias as a minority led some of them to feel that they would be safer with India (that Kashmir remains part of India), though provided that the special status of Jammu and Kashmir stays untouched, and armed troops are removed from inner valley. The government’s move has erased the last hope of Shias willing to stay with India. In this time of adversity, all Kashmiris stand together despite sectarian differences,” said Sahar*, Aliya’s friend, who studies Human Resource Management in Delhi.
Masuma Ali Khan, who recently completed her post-graduation studies in English from University in Delhi, added to Sabia’s point, saying, “Shias have always been at the forefront of the separatist movement. They have always been pro-Azadi (pro-independence) but the Sunni community saw us as passive participants. Being the majority, they have set the narrative. However, when we proceed during Muharram we shout slogans of Azadi along with the name of Imam Hussein. It has become a part of the Muharram processions for Kashmiri Shias.” She believes that the Shia community’s response to the revocation of Article 370 confirms their leaning towards autonomy for Kashmir.
Umar*, a PhD student who has been studying the Kashmiri conflict, explained the position of Kashmiri Shias as one of being in “perpetual doubt.” He said that Shias spearheaded the pro-Pakistan separatist movement initially. Mohammad Abbas Ansari, a Shia cleric, was a prominent separatist leader who had an important role in the coming together of various Kashmiri separatist political outfits under one banner, All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC), in 1993. He was the first Shia leader to hold the position of the chairman of APHC.
Umar added that Shia separatist leaders were pro-Pakistan until the 1970s. They provided safe havens to the Afghan raiders sent by Pakistan in 1947 to capture Kashmir. They also supported Pakistan in the 1965 Indo- Pakistani War, which was caused by Pakistan’s continued attempts at infiltration in Jammu and Kashmir to foment insurgency in the northernmost state of India. It was after the rivalry of Saudi Arabia and Iran and its bearing on Pakistan that the Shia community drifted away from a pro-Pakistani separatist stand. Saudi Arabia and Pakistan are Sunni majority nations and Saudi Arabia’s impact and funding of a Sunni militant groups was a threat to the minority Shia population of Kashmir.
Mohammad Abbas Ansari had also founded a Shia militant outfit called the Hizbul Momineen, which stopped functioning after being targeted by Hizbul Mujahideen, a militant group associated with the Islamic State terror group. Iran funded Shia groups in Kashmir through Pakistan after the Islamic Revolution – a 1978-1979 civil uprising in Iran that led to the fall of the monarchy – but a sectarian divide in Kashmir led Shias towards Azadi and less in favour of Kashmir joining Pakistan.
In this context, Umar added that the Shia community felt threatened as a minority in Kashmir.
While there is a degree of empathy for the Hindu Kashmiri Pandits, who fled Kashmir in huge numbers during the late 1980s and early 1990s, few hold Kashmiri Muslims responsible for the persecution of Shias. Umar believes that the complicity of Kashmiri Muslims in the displacement of Kashmiri Pandits has been vastly ignored. There are fundamentalist sections in the Kashmiri Muslim majority that are a cause of concern for minorities. “First the slogan was against Pandits. After Kashmiri Pandits left, the slogan was ‘Kae’firan patt’e chhe Raefi’zun laar’ which translated to ‘After the infidels (Hindus), it is the Shias who will be hounded’,” Umar said.
Umar uses this to elaborate the “perpetual doubt” that the Shia community has been living in. On one side, he explains, conservative religious groups (mostly fundamentalist Sunni) have mushroomed in Kashmir, which worries Shias, and on the other side, Shias have stood united as Kashmiris against the alleged brutality of Indian State.
While Shias remain in “doubt,” they seemed more vocal about their opposition to alleged excesses and human rights violations by the Indian armed forces than their grievances against Kashmir’s Sunni Muslims

A Kashmiri Pandit's Daughter Visits Soura : Her First Visit To Kashmir


August 2019: What I Saw in Kashmir

Kashmir cries out in anger and anguish as India’s crackdown remains in place.
By Tapasya
August 2019: What I Saw in Kashmir
A woman expressing anger towards Indian armed forces for attacking protesters in Srinagar’s Soura area on Aug 30.
Credit: Tapasya for The Diplomat
My family, Kashmiri Hindus, migrated out of the disputed valley in the first month of 1990, after the minority community was targeted by militants. They packed what they could and left for Jammu. They have never visited Kashmir since then. For me as well, the decree was set in stone: “Kashmir is not safe. You can’t go there.”
Somehow still, I managed to visit Kashmir in August 2019—for the first time in my life.
My first instinct upon landing was to get out of the airport and feel the ground beneath my feet. However, my resolve was to witness what really was happening in Kashmir since since August 5, when the Indian government abrogated Article 370 of the Indian Constitution, revoking the autonomy of the region. Kashmir has been in a state of strict curfew and communication blockade since then.
Article 370 was adopted to negotiate a special status for the state of Jammu and Kashmir in the Indian federal structure. According to it, the state government’s approval was needed to implement any federal laws in the state, except for laws concerning defense, foreign affairs and communications. Apart from that, the state had control over some laws, including those regarding citizenship and property rights.
Since the abrogation of Article 370, without any participation from representatives of the state, the people in the valley are protesting and showing their resistance towards the government’s moves in the aftermath, which includes the detention of many local political leaders.
Having read of claims of “normalcy” in Kashmir by the federal government, I and my colleagues at StoriesAsia chose to visit the Soura area in Srinagar, the scene of some of the biggest protests and ensuing violence in Kashmir, on August 30, a Friday.
Inside Soura stands the shrine of Aasaar Sharief Jinaab Sahib, a mosque which holds 14 relics of paramount importance to Muslims and Islam around the world. The people of Soura are bound fast by their devotion to this shrine.
The neighborhood had barricaded themselves to prevent India’s federal armed forces from entering. However, we were welcomed. Before dawn, we entered through a huge gate with a small inlet. The streets had been dug up to hamper the movement of vehicles. The people inside were planning protests after the Friday prayers. The youths were guarding the area in shifts.
The entire area of Soura was one in its resistance to the Indian government’s move, as well as to attempts by Indian armed personnel to breach it.
It wasn’t unusual to find women crying on the streets, praying for their sons who had renounced sleep to guard their neighborhood. A local woman, on seeing us with cameras, started flailing her hands in the air and yelled at us: “Are we going to live with this India, an India that has snatched our sleep and our food? What can we do, how can we fight them? Only God is on our side; neither Pakistan nor India will do anything for us. God will do justice to us, He will bring disgrace and ignominy upon those who have tyrannized us.”
She was walking around the shrine, whose white and green walls were complementing the lawn in the front. Beyond the lawn was unused land, serving as a buffer between the shrine and the entry to the neighborhood where the barricades were.
At around two in the afternoon, after the namaz, boys, men, girls and women gathered in the lawn in front of the shrine. Slogans for azadi(freedom) and against the Indian government emerged. A drone appeared, hovering above. The women and girls waved at those drones and shouted slogans of “azadi,” in defiance, knowing that it was to spot protesters’ exact location.
A sudden loud bang followed. Indian security personnel had arrived, making yet another attempt to get inside Soura. A whole swathe of people ran towards the barricade, about 100 meters from the shrine. Men, women and children, everyone started running to the front. One after another, tear gas shells and chili grenades whizzed past the crowd, and us, following explosions. The whole street leading up to the shrine was in mayhem. People were running back and forth, some running to the front carrying piles of stones and others retreating after suffocating due to tear gas or getting hit by pellets.
Tear gas was shot indiscriminately. As shells landed, the whole street from the mosque to the barricade was covered in clouds of thick smoke. The few journalists who were covering the event, apart from the protesting masses, were affected by the tear gas and had to take cover for a while. The locals were giving salt to apply on the face and water to drink. If it was not for their generosity, I would have been left in the middle of nowhere with burning eyes, coughing and suffocating.
Journalists had to hide their identities because Indian forces did not want any information to come out of Soura. It seemed like an attempt to hide the gruesome picture of silencing protests through brute force behind pictures of celebration that had been put up by the largely pro-government national media in India.
Inside the shrine, the injured were being given first-aid, by volunteers. One after another, young men were brought, with bodies strewn with pellets — little red holes all over the torsos. Sisters and mothers wailing, cursing India. “What have we done to beget this hell?” one of them yelled. Many were holding rags to their eyes, possibly hurt by the pellets.
On a little porch that led to the main building of the shrine, about a dozen women could be seen crying and thumping their breasts. Some raised their hands to the shrine and bent down to their knees, praying for mercy. A young girl got the news that the tear gas shell had probably burned a part of her house near the barricade. As she broke down in a burst of sobs, I knew how the nation had broken thousands of children to the point of no reconciliation. I remembered the groups of children in the streets, earlier in the morning, shouting in unison, “Naare Takbeer, Allahu Akbar” (Allah is the greatest). These are the children of Kashmir, carrying pain in one half of their heart, anger in the other.
Locals told us that the armed forces raided their neighborhood whenever they felt like. This was why the need to barricade themselves in had arisen. After the attempts to breach, in the furor, there were widespread speculations that houses had been vandalized. “They break into houses, loot and pillage, and damage our property. We have lost our sleep. There is always fear of a raid. Our lives have become a living hell: guarding and anticipating violence by the Indian forces has become the only routine,” lamented an old man holding his head in his hands.
After around three hours of clashes, with around 50 people injured, the evening came with a little respite. We took shelter in a home nearby and discussed ways to get out of Soura. Due to the lockdown, it had been difficult to reach the place, and now we were stuck there with no means of transport back. At last, we decided to walk to a place where we could find an auto or a taxi.
The sun was down and the track was bordered on one side by houses. On the other side, there were small fields that contrasted with the sky. The air was macabre and my first experience of my homeland was of a crying populace that had sacrificed its life at the altar of resistance.
A local man offered to drive us back to our hotel. It was of utmost importance for us that what was recorded should not be lost. At a security checkpoint, the car was stopped. The personnel lit a torch on us and asked the driver, “What is your name?” “Irfan,” he said. “Where do you live, and what do you do?”
“I live in Delhi. I am a property dealer.”
“Property is really costly there. Get us some land there,” chuckled the armed and uniformed man.
“Now I’ll start my business here. With the Article gone, people (from outside) should come here and breathe the pristine air of Kashmir.”
“Yes, yes, we’ll buy,” laughed the guy.
“However, it is going to be a lot costlier here (than in Delhi). And with the situation, who do you think would want to live here?”
The personnel’s face fell. He agreed and let us pass. We drove on with the confusion of a smile and sadness mixed together.
Who will want to live in Kashmir? What is the pristine air of Kashmir? Crying women and children, and tear gas and pellets is all that comes to mind

Friday 27 September 2019

A Week Of Revelations (not the Divine kind!)


The past few days have been a sort of 'revealationary' kind! (If I may be permitted to coin that word!)


I realised that the Deputy Station Master At Mumbai Central should have been a lawyer instead!

I had gone to him to register a complaint. I was boarding the Vadodara Express at Borivali since the Dehradun Express was bound for Bandra Terminus and we wanted to go to Bombay Central.


But even as I  pushed Rukaiya aboard, the train started moving slowly. I proceeded to put her wheelchair on board but realised the train was accelerating too fast. So put the wheelchair back on the platform and jumped into the train. I pulled the chain in different segments four times, but the train did not stop.


The RPF constable on board did help and informed us that the luggage and wheelchair were kept at a juice stall and that I should go back and collect it.


Transported my handicapped sister on a handcart at Bombay Central to  the taxi stand. I secured her in bed at home and left for Borivali. Found our luggage and the wheelchair and brought them to Bombay Central

Decided to lodge a complaint. Since the Station Master was only due to come in at 10 am, met his deputy. After listening to my complaint that the train did not stop despite my pulling the emergency chain what he said took me.by surprise


He explained how the whole suburban train schedule would have been rattled out of place. You could have been jailed for it, he said!  You got saved because the train did not stop!

And I thought this man has got into a wrong vocation. He should've joined the bar at law! He would've made the finest of fine lawyers!


Anyway, to move on. The next revelation was more of a shock, not all plesant.

I had been travelling through Gujarat and at one point I decided to  give away some clothes to a needy person.


A couple of people politely declined. Then someone pointed to a house where the lady of the house was serving chapatis, dal and rice to a man - unkempt hair, dirty and haggard looking.

I approached him and asked him if he would like to have the clothes. A little reluctant at first he accepted it after some urging from the lady who was feeding him.


A few polite queries brought forth some revelations which amazed and concerned me

His right foot was injured when he was getting away from the world's most heavily secured jail which has been without internet or mobile phone communication for the past almost two months.


I probed his feelings  gently and he told me the same thing ,which fact finding missions and human rights groups have asserted. Self Determination. Freedom to choose their own destiny. His anger for the regime and it's leaders and for those responsible for the atrocities committed, was vehemently strong.


It was a poignant moment when he left, visibly limping. There was so much I wanted to do for him, but I could only wish him well. Fi-amaanulah! I leave you in the safeguard of Allah!


And there came a realization  of Rukaiya's childlike petulance as she kept looking out of the train carriage window ceaselessly, sometimes pensively and excited at other.









She loves travelling and I can well imagine what it must have been for her to live in a limited motility situation the past sixty eight years of her life.


Decided to change routine and take her out on the Hajiali seaface last Thursday. Whilst returning met a group of friends who were trying to take group selfies outside NSCI  and ii offered to help.  We were meeting for the first time.


Whilst we were exchanging information about each other and clicking group selfie, one more friend of theirs came up and joined us.


No sooner did Rukaiya, my handicapped sister see this man, she exploded angrily telling him to go away


We were all taken aback. But just then realised the possible reason for this.


His cleanshaven face resembled Rajesh Gandhi, the neighbour staying in the flat opposite ours.  When I asked Rukaiya who this person was, she promptly replied loudly and clearly 'Iqbal'  For a moment I was nonplussed - a whole bunch of events of the past few years came back to me in a flash.


But that shall be Part 2 of this post. Rajesh Gandhi alias Iqbal deserves a full independent writeup


US court summons Modi & Amit Shah: Atrocities against Kashmiris & Sikhs

US court summons Modi & Amit Shah: Atrocities against Kashmiris & Sikhs
"Kashmir, Khalistan Referendum Front" filed a petition in the court of Texas, Houston against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for atrocities in Kashmir and against Sikhs in India. Modi, Amit Shah and General Dhillon, Commander of Indian forces in occupied Jammu & Kashmir have been summoned.
 
Modi

A US Court has issued summons to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Amit Shah, Indian Interior Minister and General Dhillon, Commander of Indian forces in the occupied state of Jammu & Kashmir over Modi government’s brutal crack down of Kashmiri population of almost 8 million and alarming human rights violations in Kashmir. Almost 8 million population has been under curfew, generalised lock down and communication black out out since Modi regime knocked down the autonomous status of the state through a hastily forced controversial legislation from Delhi.
The petition was filed by two Kashmiri citizens under the name of their organization the “Kashmir Khalistan Referendum Front” in the District Court of Houston Division in the state of Texas. It has also nominated Modi’s Minster of Interior Amit Shah (or Home Minister, as it is called in India) who spearheaded the legislation scrapping Kashmir’s special status in the Indian parliament. The head of India’s military force in Kashmir Lt. General Kanwal Jeet Singh Dhillon has also been nominated in the petition. General Dhillon commands the most heavily militarized region in the world, also called the world’s largest prison and has been accused of “cruel, inhuman, degrading treatment or punishment” on unarmed Kashmiris in the petition. The defendants have been asked to respond in 21 days.
The group behind the petition, the Kashmir Khalistan Referendum Front represents a concerted effort of pro-independence Kashmiris as well as Sikhs who have been disillusioned with Modi-led BJP’s Hindu Nationalist government which has a particularly horrible record regarding religious intolerance.
For compensatory damages, the defendants have been asked to pay $100 million. For punitive and exemplary damages, the court has been asked to order relevant punitive measures.
The petition has cited an Associated Press Story from August 14 that explained the state of the military brutality in Indian occupied Kashmir that published accounts of over 50 Kashmiris who had been subject to torture, beatings and even electric shocks. Media outlets have also said that sounds of people being tortured are being sent out to villages via loud speaker to create an atmosphere of fear. Thousands have been arrested in the crackdown and medicines are increasingly scarce.
The banners and signs compare Modi to Hitler and outline how he presided over the systematic and organized butchering of Muslims as Chief Minisiter of Gujrat
The case has been filed only two days before PM Modi is set to appear in front of a large crowd of American Indians in the NGR Stadium in Houston. US President Donald Trump is also expected to show up with Modi in the 3 hour-long event which is expected to be attended by 50,000 people. The event has been titled “Howdy Modi”. The President of the US meeting a head of government in his country outside of White House or the UN is virtually unheard of.
The whole run-up to the event is visibly and remarkably similar to PM Imran Khan’s address to the Pakistani Community in the Capital One Arena in Washington in July this year. Pakistani premier’s address to a huge gathering of Pakistani Americans had sent a strong message to White House, US media, and public about the popularity of PM Khan. Now apparently Indian government wants to do the same for Narendra Modi who is under continuous attack for his brutal actions in Kashmir – were state of curfew is continuing with interruptions for the 47th day since Aug 4, 2019.
However, for the last two weeks, the Pakistani, Kashmiri and Sikh community in America has been gearing up to give PM Modi a welcome he won’t be expecting. Trucks and billboards exposing Modi’s agenda have been on the roads spreading their message far and wide. The message is clear Modi and BJP’s Nazi-inspired pogrom is not acceptable to Kashmiris or Sikhs. The group has decided to organize a “Go Back Modi” rally on the same day as he takes the stage with Trump in Houston.
The banners and signs compare Modi to Hitler and outline how he presided over the systematic and organized butchering of Muslims as Chief Minister of Gujrat. The role of the BJP ideology in attacking the Babri Mosque is being shown as a proof of Modi’s belief in an India free of Muslims. His latest atrocities in Kashmir, which are continuing despite international pressure is just the realization of what has long been feared.
Modi had travel ban by key countries after Gujarat
Interestingly the world had recognised Narendra Modi as an undesirable character till fairly recently. After the Gujarat massacres in 2002, under his watch as Chief Minister, many countries of the world including the United States had placed a visa ban on Modi. UK and many EU countries had done the same.
Within India, Modi was blamed for orchestrating the massacres as a revenge for killing of Hindu pilgrims at a train station at Godhra.  Senior police officers had testified to that account. For several days, Hindu mobs killed and burned Muslims with impunity without any visible or decisive interference by state authorities controlled by Modi. Gujarat pogroms, ironically, established Modi as a strong leader of Hindutva.
Visa ban against Modi, from key western countries, had continued till 2013, when most countries realised that Modi was set to become India’s next prime minister and they took the decision to reverse the visa ban. Now Narendra Modi travels on A-1, (State Visas) and will thus enjoy immunity from courts like in Houston.