Category: Union Territory

  • Aasiyeh Andrabi criticises Pakistan, says not fulfilling its Kashmir responsibility

    SRINAGAR: Chairperson of Dukhtaran-e-Millat (DeM), Syedah Aasiyeh Andrabi, on Thursday criticised Pakistani government “for failing to play its role in resolving Kashmir dispute effectively.”

    In a statement issued here, Andrabi said, “The people of Pakistan are with us wholeheartedly, but it seems that the establishment as well as all political parties are not as passionate and interested.”

    “We observe January 5 as the day when the people of Jammu and Kashmir were guaranteed the right to determine their future in 1949. But why these resolutions are yet to be implemented. One of the reason is that Pakistan isn’t fulfilling its responsibility as effectively with regard to the Kashmir issue,” she said.

    She said that Kashmiris are struggling from the past 70 years with an understanding that “Kashmir issue is an unfinished agenda of partition”. “So it is expected of Pakistan that it does more than what it is doing,” she said.

    DeM chief said that it is ironic that the leaders in Pakistan are busy in “political fist fighting”. “How unfortunate is that these leaders forget Kashmir dispute after coming into the power,” she said.

    Flaying the Pakistan for its weak foreign policy and influence in the international forums, Andrabi said: “The diplomatic efforts and influence of Pakistan is so weak that the UN is banning organisations like Jamat-u-Dawah and Falah-i-Insaniyat foundation. These organisations work tirelessly for the welfare of the humanity and are always ready to help the oppressed people wherever needed. These organisations provide relief to the troubled people in Palestine, Iraq, Myanmar and other places.”

    “But it is unfortunate that under the influence of India and US, UN is putting sanctions on such organisations,” she said.

    She asked why Pakistan is not able to expose “the Indian aggression” in UN. “Why is Pakistan is incapable of persuading the world that the Hindu organisations in India – RSS, Shiv Sena, Ram Sena , Karmi sena , Bajrangdal ,BJP and others, which are killing Muslims with absolute impunity, are terrorist organisations and get them banned,” she questioned.

    Andrbai said that to mark the January 5, the day UN passed the Kashmir resolution, the people of Jammu and Kashmir must “pledge that they will continue the struggle against the illegal Indian occupation” until this issue isn’t resolved as per these UN resolutions.

    She added: The Pakistan government, army as well as all political parties, must stand up collectively and play its role more effectively for the Kashmir cause.

    “Pakistan is becoming pawns under the influence of infidels,” Andrabi said, “that is the reasons that the Muslims are being massacred and tortured everywhere.”

    Taking a dig at the UN, Andrabi said that because of the uselessness and hypocrisy of UN, its resolutions on Kashmir are yet to be implemented.

    “69 years have passed, but the UN is unable to do anything regarding the implementation of UN resolutions,” she added.

    She said that this issue came into being with the creation of Pakistan when the Indian sub-continent was divided into two parts. “India illegally and forcibly occupied JK by sending its troops, and since then this issue is lingering,” she said, adding the Muslims of Jammu and Kashmir have been doing whatever they could to fight their occupation.

    “As many as 6.5 lakh people have sacrificed their lives, the women have lost everything, we are being killed, maimed, jailed and the oppression continues. On January 6, 1993, Sopore saw the worst massacre in which one whole locality was burnt down. Dozens of people including small kids were charred to death. There are countless such massacres recorded in Kashmir’s brutal history,” DeM chief said.

  • Why the December 31 Militant Attack Should Have Forces Worried

    In the past 28 years of insurgency, Kashmiri militants have rarely been a part of suicide squads which stormed security establishments within or outside the summer capital. 

    Fardeen Ahmad Khanday was an introvert who preferred the solace of his room to hanging out with friends. He was a “bookworm”, says his father Ghulam Mohammad, and had been rigorously preparing for his class X exams. On September 15 last year, after drinking his early morning tea, the 16-year-old boy told his mother that he was going out for a walk.

    When he didn’t come back home till evening, Fardeen’s parents rang up relatives and his friends and asked them to look for their son. A week later, they had all but given up on the search when a picture of Fardeen – tall, lean and the eldest of four brothers – appeared on social media brandishing an AK-47 rifle. He had joined Jaish-e-Mohammad, a decision which “shocked” his parents and neighbours who had known Fardeen since he was a child.

    “He won’t even keep a mobile phone, saying it will distract him from studies. He was a normal boy till he disappeared; he would attend tuition classes in the morning and after school hours, and then return to his room to prepare for exams,” Ghulam Mohammad told The Wire.

    Fardeen’s life as a militant lasted for a little over three months. On the morning of December 31, when news broke out that a fidayeen squad of Jaish-e-Mohammad launched a pre-dawn attack on CRPF’s training-cum-induction centre at Lethpora in Pulwama, Mohammad, a police constable serving more than 200 km away in Kupwara, received a call from the district police lines. Fardeen, he was told, has been killed along with another local militant, Manzoor Ahmad Baba, in the fierce gun battle inside the camp that left five CRPF personnel dead. The next day, the body of a third militant, a foreigner, was recovered from the debris, bringing the 36-hour gunfight to an end. The fidayeen attack was the first of its kind in the Valley, involving mostly Kashmiri militants, who succeeded in storming a security camp. It took place at a time when the Jammu and Kashmir police and other security agencies had killed 206 militants in a single year, the highest in the past seven years.

    The last time such an attack happened was in 2000, when Kashmiri militant Afaq Ahmad Shah blew himself up at the entrance gate of the army’s 15-corps headquarter at Badamibagh in summer capital.

    For the security establishment, argued a senior police official, the December 31 attack was “disturbing” and a “cause for concern” on two accounts. First, there were prior inputs about a possible attack by Jaish-e-Mohammad to avenge the killing of its militant commander, Noor Muhammad Tantray alias Noor Trali, in a gunfight in Pampore area last week. Less than four feet tall, 45-year-old Tantray had jumped parole last year to become a militant.

    But, more importantly, in a departure from its strategy, for the first time the outfit chose two local militant as fidayeens. Fardeen had even recorded a video message for Kashmiri youth to explain the “need for jihad”. This was also the first time that any militant organisation in Kashmir released a video of a recruit about to carry out a suicide attack.

    In the past 28 years of insurgency, Kashmiri militants have rarely been a part of suicide squads which stormed security establishments within or outside the summer capital. The last such attack was on defence establishments in the Uri border town in September 2016, in which 17 army personnel were killed.

    While Jaish-e-Mohammad has been the architect of such attacks in Kashmir, the group has always recruited foreigners for such strikes.

    The Lethpora attack could, however, mark the beginning of a shift in strategy of militant outfits like Jaish-e-Mohammad to recruit Kashmiri militants as fidayeens.

    Adding to the worries of the Jammu and Kashmir police and other security agencies is the video which surfaced hours after the gunfight, in which slain Fardeen asks Kashmiri youth to “join the fight against Indian aggression”.

    In the video, a calm-looking Fardeen, who was from Tral, hometown of slain Hizbul militant commander Burhan Wani, speaks in chaste Urdu, emphasising that youth joining militancy has nothing to do with “propaganda of unemployment being run by the security agencies”.

    “Our land has been occupied by infidels…so jihad becomes our duty. Youth, please realise your duties and join this fight for azadi,” he says in the nearly eight minute video while listing major strikes carried by the militant outfit in the past, including one on Pathankot airbase and Nagrota camp.

    “By the time this video reaches you I would be a guest in heaven, God willing,” he says, indicating that the Lethpora attack had been planned before the video was shot. “My friends and I have listened to the call for jihad and taken a plunge into the battlefield…even after repeated claims that Jaish-e-Mohammad is finished in Kashmir, I want to tell everyone it is impossible to stop Jaish-e-Mohammad now. Youth are sacrificing their lives for the nation as azadi can’t be achieved without sacrifices.” Fardeen speaks fluently, sitting with three Kalashnikovs and other ammunition around him.

    The other slain militant, 22-year-old Manzoor Baba from the Drabgam area of Pulwama, was a fruit grower before joining militancy in October last year. His name was in the headlines in the local media recently, when his family in November made a fervent appeal to him to return home following the surrender of footballer-turned-militant Majid Khan from Anantnag.

    Led by Maulana Masood Azhar, Jaish-e-Mohammad was largely based in north Kashmir before it was almost wiped off from the Valley. But after Burhan Wani became the poster boy for militancy in Kashmir, a few of the outfit’s militants worked in close coordination with him in the south till 2013.

    During the last 10-12 months, however, the group plotted some large-scale attacks to announce its revival. The first one was on the police lines in Pulwama, in which eight police and paramilitary forces and three militants were killed. Another was at the BSF camp near Srinagar airport, killing an assistant sub-inspector.

    Behind the return of the outfit is believed to be 47-year-old slain militant Tantray. While he worked in south Kashmir and used his network to recruit “some youth” from the Pulwama-Shopian belt, said another police official, infiltration of around 80 militants last year from across the LoC, some of them belonging to Jaish-e-Mohammad, also added numbers to the group.

    Tantray had been convicted in a militancy-related case in 2003 and was in prison. In July last year, he jumped a parole to join the militant outfit and went on to act as coordinator for several militant groups operating in south Kashmir, said the police official.

    While militant outfits like Hizbul Mujahideen and Lashkar-e-Tayyaba are operating in coordination, particularly in south Kashmir, the Lethpora attack and, more importantly, the involvement of Kashmiri militants as fidayeens, many believe, should be a cause for deep worry for the security establishment.

    “If we only go by statistics of security agencies, there are around 300 militants still operating in the Valley. It shows that militancy is far from over and maybe getting deadlier if this (Lethpora) attack is any indication,” said political analyst Noor M. Baba.

    (The story was written by a Srinagar-based journalist Mudasir Ahmad, first appeared in The Wire.)

  • Police blame Lashkar for Sopore youth’s killing

    Srinagar: Even as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) claimed the youth killed in north Kashmir on Wednesday evening was a party worker, the J&K Police today claimed that the Lashkar-e-Toiba was behind the killing.

    Arif Ahmad, 26, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen outside his home in Harwan Unisoo village of Sopore in Baramulla district on Wednesday evening. Ahmed was laid to rest today amid “pro freedom” slogans and protests in the area.

    Deputy Inspector General of Police, North Kashmir, Vidhi Kumar Birdi blamed militants for the killing of youth.

    “Our investigation has so far found that Lashkar men were behind the killing,” Birdhi told The Tribune. “Further investigation in the case is underway.”

    Ahmed’s father Mohammad Maqbool Sofi said his son was taken by the gunmen and shot at point-blank range around 7 pm on Wednesday.

    He was shifted to a hospital where doctors declared him brought dead,” Sofi said. Sofi is a known figure in the area and has remained associated with separatist groups. Ahmed was the lone bread-earner of the six-member family.

    BJP state president Sat Sharma and state general secretary (Organisation) Ashok Kaul in an official statement said Ahmed was a party worker.

    Pained to learn about the brutal murder of our worker in Sopore. Terrorists must realise that they cannot stop the youth of the Valley from choosing a better future for themselves,” they said in a statement. However, the family of the youth denied the BJP claim, saying it was “baseless.”

    Meanwhile, the chairman of the moderate Hurriyat Conference Mirwaiz Umar Farooq termed the killing cowardly. “Killing of human beings in every form is cowardly and against humanity,” Mirwaiz tweeted.

    ‘Clear stand’ 

    Srinagar: Reiterating that killings are no solution to resolve political issues, Awami Ittehad Party, headed by independent legislator Engineer Rasheed, has appealed to the militant outfits to clear their stand on the killing of Arif Ahmad Sofi (25) in Sopore. Protests erupted in Unisoo village of north Kashmir on Thursday morning against Sofi’s killing by unknown gunmen on Wednesday evening at Harwan in Sopore. Party spokesman Maajid Banday, in a statement issued on Thursday, said while people had least hope from the administration to find out the truth, the other side needs to clear the confusion over the killing. TNS

  • 75-year-old woman adopted by Salman Khan celebrates his birthday in Kashmir village

    During the shoot of Bajrangi Bhaijaan in Kashmir, Salman Khan swore to help Zaina Begum and her family.

  • First Kashmir-based film to be released across country

    Srinagar: For the first time, a locally made two-and-a-half-hour film — ‘Kashmir Daily’ — will be released across the country this week. Even as only a handful of films have so far been produced in the Valley without cinema halls, the scheduled country-wide release of the film has brought cheer to its makers.

    ‘Kashmir Daily’ has well-known Bollywood actor of Kashmiri origin — Mir Sarwar — in the lead role, who has acted in acclaimed films Bajrangi Bhaijaan, Phantom, Dishoom and Jolly LLB-2.

    “This is for the first time that a film made in Kashmir is releasing across the country. It’s a small release compared to other big budget films, but we are thankful to God that at least it is getting released across the country,” Sarwar told The Tribune.

    Though he has made a mark in Bollywood, Sarwar said ‘Kashmir Daily’ was very close to his heart. “I expect more independent filmmakers to come forward and make films. We have paved a way for others,” he said.

    He said Friday onwards, the film would be screened at PVRs of different cities like Jammu, Bangalore, Mumbai, Delhi, Udaipur, Bangalore, Pune, Faridabad, Chennai and Kolkata.

    Hussein Khan, writer, producer and director, said ‘Kashmir Daily’, shot in Urdu and Kashmiri, was completed over a period of around three years. “There was no help from the government or private sector. We shot the movie on our own. Due to financial constraints, we shot in small schedules of two to four days for around a total of 50-60 days over two and a half years. It was a dream to make a film in Kashmir and nourish the film industry here,” he said.

    The cinema halls in the Valley were shut soon after the eruption of militancy more than 27 years ago. Even as a few cinemas tried to reopen later, they had to shut again and the movie lovers, for years now, have been watching films on pirated DVDs or the Internet.

    Produced by Seven2Creations with Safdar Arts, Khan said the film had been approved by the Central Board of Film Censorship with a “U” certificate. The film also has popular actor Zameer Ashai, besides Neelam Singh, Sanam Ziya and Rajinder Tickoo in the cast.

    Reported The Tribune

  • MeT predicts wet weather in Kashmir Valley   

    Srinagar: Weatherman on Thursday predicted wet weather for next 24 to 36 hours in the Kashmir division.

    “We are expecting light to moderate snowfall in higher reaches of the Jammu and Kashmir and light rain/snow in plains of both the regions of the State during next 24 to 36 hours”, Director Metrological Department Sonum Lotus told news agency GNS over phone.

    He said that thereafter the weather will remain dry for nearly 10 days in the state. 

    Meanwhile, mercury plunged to -20 degrees Celsius in Kargil while as temperatures remained several degrees below the freezing point elsewhere in Kashmir Valley.

    Srinagar, the summer capital of Jammu and Kashmir, had a low of -3.9 degrees Celsius, a MET department official said.

    The mercury in Qazigund settled at a minimum of -4.4 degrees Celsius. The nearby town of Kokernag recorded a low of -2.5 degrees Celsius. Kupwara in north Kashmir quivered at -3.6 degrees Celsius.

    Gulmarg, the world famous ski resort, reeled under freezing -6 degrees Celsius.

    The night temperature in Pahalgam settled at -4.5 degrees Celsius. (GNS)


     

  • ‘Lethpora attack aftermath, MHA asks security agencies to strengthen security in vital establishments’

    Srinagar: In the back drop of Lethpora Pulwama attack, in which five central Reserve Police personnel and three militants were killed, The Ministry of Home affairs (MHA) has advised the security agencies in Kashmir for strengthening of security in vital establishments which are “vulnerable” to militant attacks.

    “There are various buildings of security forces, which give militants an advantage to fight battle for longer hours. Security of such buildings must be revived along the highway to ensure militants don’t hole up inside if they carry out any attack in future,” the MHA directives according to sources have said.

    Militants stormed a central reserve police force (CRPF) camp in Lethpora area along the Srinagar-Anantnag highway in an audacious pre-dawn strike on Sunday, killing at least five CRPF personnel. Three militants were also killed.

    One of the top officials of the police officials though maintained that the security review is an ongoing process but told KNS that the security agencies are reviewing security of vital installations and establishments in Kashmir in view militants taking advantage of multi-storey concrete buildings and carrying out Fidayeen attacks on camps. “There are some establishments which are vulnerable to attacks. The security agencies have been directed to carry out their security review to combat any of the attacks,” the police official said wishing not to be named.

    The official said that Fidayeen attack was carried out on Lethpora camp to engage security forces for longer hours. “There are many big buildings in which militants tried to be holed up but the CRPF personnel fought and killed them and defeat what they were aimed for,” the official said.

    Special DGP, CRPF, S N Shrivastava, said that security is being reviewed of all security establishments. “Security review is an ongoing process. We are doing it as per the situation and upgrading security accordingly,” he said.

    He said that security forces were ready to combat militancy in the valley. “We will take every measure whatever is required to eradicate militancy.”

    Further the CCTVs are also being installed in various vital buildings of the Valley to ensure militants don’t take advantage which are vulnerable for such attacks.

    Earlier, the militants had engage security forces for hours after holed up inside inside a six-storey building of Entrepreneurship Development Institute (JKEDI) Pampore.

    The gunfight, one of the longest in the recent history of Kashmir is believed that militants had managed to keep security forces engaged so long by taking advantage of the building.

    Sources said that the issue was also raised up in a recent security meeting where it was directed security agencies to ensure militants don’t manage to hole up inside such establishments and “all possible loopholes” are plugged in time. Security forces were directed to follow proper SOP so that militants don’t get a change to escape.

    Besides that periodical security review of these installations is also carried out to further strengthen and update the security aspects, sources said.

    Earlier a high level committee of the army has suggested measures to strengthen security of various military establishments. “The new strategy on part of militants like targeting vital installations may be a move to inflict more casualties on forces besides damaging the establishments as well. So the committee reviewed the security of vital installations and suggested various measures to the concerned agencies,” an army official said. (KNS)

  • BJP uploads photographs of innocent Kashmiri girls, Presented them as Mahila Morcha workers

    Sopore: Dozens of girls from Tarzoo Sopore village of North Kashmir’s Baramulla district Thursday accused BJP of playing cheap politics and lashed at its woman activist for uploading their pictures of social media networking sites.

    A Press Statement from Bharitiay Janata Party on Wednesday had claimed that party held a Mahila Morcha meeting at Tarzoo Sopore that was organized by District Mahila Morcha President Baramulla Mrs Arifa Jan while Chief Guest was District President BJP Baramulla DK Nehru.

    “A couple of people along with a woman Arifa Jan from Dhobiwan village entered into our house promising to set up a ‘Cutting and Tailoring’ Centre for the girls. My three sisters called other girls from neighborhood. Even our relative Ghulam Hasan was accompanying them who first introduced them as Social Welfare employees and then informed us that they are party leaders from BJP and they have talked to Social Welfare Department for setting up a Cutting and Tailoring’ Centre for girls in the village,” Danish Ahmed Bhat, the brother of three sisters told news agency CNS. (CNS)


        He said that Arif Jan, took some photographs of the girls from her cell phone. When girls objected, she said photographs are for record purposes.


        “The girls were so upset, even one of my sisters tried to end her life when they saw their photographs have gone viral on the social media, while netizens abusing them freely,” Bhat said adding BJP played with the honour of these girls and the main culprit is BJP worker Arifa Jan.


        The girls said they will register an FIR against the BJP workers. “We were cheated by them particularly by Arifa Jan. We talked to them after they assured ‘Cutting and Tailoring’ Centre for them but they presented us as BJP Mahila Morcha workers,” the victims said and requested netizens not to abuse them on social media. (CNS)

  • Weather forecast for tomorrow

    Forecast for next 24 hours: Light to moderate Rain/Snow will occur at many places over the state.

    Outlook for subsequent 2 days: Scattered to Isolated Rain/Snow

    Local forecast of Srinagar:

    Moderate RAIN/SNOW. Maximum & Minimum temperatures will be around 07 & -4.0oC respectively.

    Local forecast of Jammu:

    Light RAIN/THUNDERSHOWERS. Maximum & Minimum temperatures will be around 15°C & 03°C respectively.

    Local forecast of Leh:

    Light SNOW. Maximum & Minimum temperatures will be around 01 C & -15°C respectively.

  • Dineshwar Sharma says after Governor NN Vohra’s appeal, ball now in separatists’ court

    Srinagar: Two days after the Governor NN Vohra asked separatists in Kashmir to talk to GOI’s special envoy, Dineshwar Sharma on Thursday said that the ball is now in the court of the separatists.

    Talking to KNS from New Delhi over phone, Dineshwar Sharma said that he will be visiting Jammu and Kashmir by the mid of January and will continue to talk to the people of different shades of opinion for the sustainable peace in the state. “I am visiting the state again by January 15 and this will be my first visit of the year 2018 to Jammu and Kashmir. I haven’t chalked out any strategy yet but this is for sure that I am coming to Kashmir this month,” Sharma told KNS.

    Reacting over the recent appeal by the Governor NN Vohra to separatists in Kashmir to talk to GOI’s special envoy, Sharma said he has already offered dialogue with the separatists and that the ball now lies in their court only. “Now the separatists have to decide when they can talk. I have already made an offer to them,” Shama said.

    Earlier, while addressing the joint session of the state legislature in Jammu ahead of the Budget session on January 2, the state governor NN Vohra had, in his address, asked the separatists to come forward and talk to Sharma. (KNS)