Category: Articles

  • Rape is not a spectacle, don’t violate privacy: Barkha Dutt

    Barkha Dutt
    A judge who tried the case acquitted the accused because he believed men of a certain caste would not ‘touch’ a woman of a caste considered inferior to theirs; forgetting, again that Rape is Not about Sex; it’s about Power, says Barkha Dutt. 

    Dear colleagues,

    Before we talk about what the most sensitive and appropriate way there might be for all of us to report on rape and sexual abuse, we should first acknowledge how long it took all of us — women journalists included, and sometimes especially us women — to place the issue at the top of the news hierarchy. I can confess that when I first began my job as a twenty-something I was very defensive about being saddled with covering what were then called ‘women’s features’. I wanted to report on politics, insurgency, riots, war, calamities — what I thought was the ‘tough’ stuff that wouldn’t ‘gender’ me as a ‘female’ reporter.

    Among my earliest assignments though was the gang rape of a Dalit woman — Bhanwari Devi — in a village in Rajasthan, who had been assaulted for trying to stop the child marriage of a one-year-old infant. She worked with a government program that sought to create local awareness against this retrograde custom. The rapists included the father of the child. If that was not bone-chilling enough; a judge who tried the case acquitted the accused because he believed men of a certain caste would not ‘touch’ a woman of a caste considered inferior to theirs; forgetting, again that Rape is Not about Sex; it’s about Power. Bhanwari Devi was ostracised by the village for daring to complain against the perpetrators. She lived on the outskirts of her own village, shunned at weddings and funerals and forbidden to draw water from the common well. That first assignment taught me swiftly that there is nothing ‘soft’ about reporting violence against women; it remains mired in our country’s deepest fault lines — caste and class.

    But in 2016, the story of Bhanwari Devi brings home some new and critical questions for me as a journalist. Our collective reportage on the ‘Nirbhaya’ case (the horrific gang rape of Jyoti Singh, a young medical student in Delhi) and the mass student protests that followed it pressured Parliament to change the laws and finally made sexual violence a lead story that could no longer be buried in the inside pages. But I have always wondered why we never responded to Bhanwari Devi with the same intensity as we did to Nirbhaya. The year that the Nirbhaya case made international headlines was also the 20th year that Bhanwari Devi had been fighting a hostile system for justice. Ironically, it is to Bhanwari Devi that we owe the ‘Vishakha’ guidelines — the first legal sexual harassment code that is now required to be followed by all workplaces. The Supreme Court recognised that Bhanwari had been abused while doing her job. It is because of Bhanwari and these guidelines her battle gifted us that influential men like RK Pachauri or Tarun Tejpal are facing trial. Yet, her own story is now on the margins of public attention as is the fact that the men who did this to her have still not been punished. More than two decades later there is still no verdict in her case. So why is our outrage missing? Is it because we are guilty of fickleness, moving on from one headline to the next? Or is it because our coverage of rape betrays the worst sort of (subliminal) class bias?

    Did ‘Nirbhaya’ get our attention in a way Bhanwari did not because one was the story of aspirational India set in an identifiable urban setting and the other was the suffering of a marginalised woman, the injustice to her as a woman clearly compounded by the caste bigotry against her. The Nirbhaya case was an inflection point in how we talk about rape and not one of us can ever shake off the thought of that moving bus and an iron rod being forced into the private parts of a young woman coming home from watching a movie. I will never undermine the enormity of that case; but I often wonder what it says about us that others like Bhanwari Devi don’t get an equal amount of anger and attention._8feb2628-9036-11e6-957d-83f787ac5cdf

    Apart from our transitory and selective focus there is a trivialisation that is creeping into our media conversations about rape that is disturbing. Take a recent ‘sex’ tape for example on the assignations of a Delhi minister. What first appeared to be consensual sex between adults has subsequently been registered as a case of rape but not before a tawdry, albeit censored camera recording played out on several TV channels. There are legitimate questions about whether the minister (since sacked) misused the power of public office to coerce the woman who is also on tape. However, the looping of this sordid footage that played endlessly to satisfy the vicarious curiosity of a mass audience surely undermines the gravity of an offence like rape. Salacious sensationalism can only do disservice to a conversation that we as a people have only just begun to have. The National Commission for Women then summoning an Aam Aadmi Party representative for writing a skeptical column (importantly at a time when there was no known complaint of rape) on the tapes and way his own party responded further eroded the seriousness of the debate.

    Finally, we must discourage language that links rape to honour. In the aftermath of every such assault aggrieved families, politicians and lawyers will often use words that confuse notions of respect. When women fight back, it is suggested they are fighting for their honour; their self-respect. The rapist and his crime cannot be allowed to define a woman’s sense of self. The fight is for justice; the dishonour is that of the criminal. And though finding that balance is always precarious, we must look for ways to report the monstrosity of the crime without violating the privacy of the rape survivor or her family with intrusive questions and thrusting microphones. We must allow the women or their families (or young men who have experienced sexual abuse as boys) to choose their own pace, their own language and give them the freedom to draw their own red lines. They cannot and must not be pushed by the punishing and often insensitive deadlines of the next television bulletin or next morning’s newspaper.

    Rape is not a spectacle. Rape is not a first headline only when it’s absolutely macabre or when it happens identifiably to people like us. Never forget – most women in India get abused within the circle of trust; 90% of Indian women who have been sexually abused know their aggressor. And we haven’t even begun talking about marital rape yet. Rape and sexual violence — they’re closer home than we think.

    (The author is consulting editor, NDTV, and founding member, Ideas Collective)

  • Naeem Akhtar Writes Open Letter To Syed Ali Shah Geelani

    Two parables and a condemned man

    Mukarrami Geelani Saheb

    A few weeks back a prominent militant organization publicly urged you to permit them to take action against those who are hurting the ‘tehreek’. Sometime later the organization actually issued a threat against me for ‘trying to open the schools’. This was followed, ironically only a day after I advised my audience of teachers to read your autobiography to understand the importance of education in the context of your personal struggle for it, you along with other leading lights of the ‘tehreek’ issued a statement justifying the action threatened earlier. A Mir Ja’afar, as I was supposed to be, obviously had to be punished. The verdict has openly gone out and the sentence is pronounced. The case is decided. An attempt to open schools, as you too mentioned in your charge sheet will go down as the newest crime in the land of Sheikhul Alam, Lal Ded and Sheikh Hamza punishable by death. And I plead guilty to having the belief that whatever our political future, it will have meaning only if our children receive education and are able to engage with the world on their terms.
    I believe that we are caught in a big situation and its complexities are nowhere near a solution. Education is one sector that can enable us to navigate through the storm. Nothing else will.
    Please don’t mistake this letter as a plea for clemency. Addition of one insignificant grave to thousands of the victims of violence will hardly matter. This place could survive the murder of the likes of Moulana Farooq, Abdul Ghani Lone, Moulana Masoodi, Dr Guru, Dr Farooq Ashai, Dr Wani, Jaleel Andrabi and countless others falling victim to guns of all description. Sadly it still is on. And I don’t count myself as in any way important enough even to be mourned. If I die one of these days or am killed I know my family might find it difficult even to get a burial place for me, for your condemnation comes with more than a death warrant. It carries a stigma. Still I would neither apologize nor explain or seek clemency.
    I believe in the same God and profess the same faith as you do. Who can teach you the Quranic verdict of the timing of death being unalterable? It will come when it has to, for me, you and everybody. But I may remind you of a lesson that you taught me more than three decades back. It is an anecdote you have recorded in one of your books and therefore part of our history.

    I had accompanied the legendary director General of Police, Peer Ghulam Hassan Shah sahib to look you up in the SMGS hospital Jammu when you were under detention. Understandably, you did not record my presence in your narration. But for the readers of this letter I’m trying to reproduce the conversation. Peer sahib had told you it’s all destined and from God when you complained about your detention. You narrated a parable to him which got etched in my memory. “A hermit stayed under a tree in a village. He would just repeat one sentence continually; jo karega Khuda karega. A mischievous person came from the rear and slapped the hermit. He turned his head around asking who it is. The person said why you are looking around as according to you it is God who does everything. The sage replied; I know it is God who did it but I was just finding out who blackened his face in the process.” For once I found Peer sahib at a loss for words.
    Respected Geelani sahib I committed this story not just to my memory but my character as well. I wonder whether you remember it.
    Why I feel education should be kept out of any discord flows not just from the common sense and cumulative wisdom of human race but also from the fact of Prophet (SAWS) organizing teaching classes of his Muslim companions in the immediate aftermath of the battle of Badr. I can’t be informing you, sir but it is worth repetition for the readers that the non believing Meccan prisoners who could read and write were released just for teaching the Muslims. They would obviously not be teaching them Islam. Education is one thing that we need for political, economic and social empowerment. Mankind is yet to invent an alternative to that.
    In that context it looks sinister that while there is a hue and cry about everything, no one is able to speak about the nearly 2 million students missing their one year. We invent reasons for and against every imaginable situation but schools is nobody’s business, especially after you decided to make an example out of me. But I would beseech you to kindly go 75 years back in time and imagine yourself in place of the teenagers for whom you had set such a great example of personal struggle from Sopore to Lahore. I’m quoting another earthy parable to end this submission. As you know sir I am from a peer family like you. My uncle was a practicing peer and highly respected. He would lead the prayers in the Masjid built on the periphery of our premises.
    Afzal Mir would never turn up for Nimaz. No one had spotted him near the mosque ever. One day when my uncle entered the mosque he was sweetly surprised to see Afzal making loud supplication. But soon he turned to him tersely reprimanding Afzal for the sole item on his wish list. He was invoking Allah for sending him a daand- a bull. “Is this what you came to the mosque for? How can you pray for a bull?” My uncle was furious. Afzal very tamely asked; what should I ask for, Peer sahib? Pray for Eemaan, Peer sahib advised. Afzal very innocently replied: But peer sahib I have got eemaan, that’s why I am praying for a bull which I don’t have. You ask for eemaan if you don’t have that.
    Sir I am praying for education for we don’t have it though we do well in most other fields. Among 34 states of India we are at 33. Can’t we have a modest but more achievable target as a Muslim majority state to convert the wish of our Prophet (SAWS) to become number one by implementing his command: Seeking knowledge is the duty of every Muslim man and woman? Can we with our present performance card face Him on the day of reckoning, you Jenab Geelani sahib as the David in the present equation and me as the Goliath, you as the angel of Azadi and me as the devil of subjugation? I believe the goal can be achieved while you keep your mission statement intact.
    I wish every child of Kashmir outperforms my children who are very well placed in life. Education saved them and many others from the fate of Insha and Junaid. It has this ability to keep people out of harm’s way like all of us, politicians, leaders, preachers, professionals, officers, journalists, writers, businessmen et al.
    I am sure if I meet you again in life you would show the same affection that you always displayed towards me. I still feel the warmth of your kisses on my forehead whenever we met and truly believe my assassin would have to target some other part of my body for my forehead bears a love mark planted by you.

    My best Wishes to Nayeem sahib and Naseem sahib. Hope they are well

    With Respectful regards

    Naeem Akhtar

  • ‘Crisis Derailed My Mission’

    Srinagar: Asking people to give her government a chance to restore peace, Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti says ;She won’t let the heads of people go down’. Admitting that 2016 unrest has weakened her position in Delhi she says ‘otherwise I had planned to press Government of India for initiating dialogue and measures demanding resolution of issues’.

    Without naming any separatist leader, she says “They (members of All Party Delegation) reached at their (separatist) doors. The atmosphere was not conducive so nobody could talk. Otherwise, I had also extended invitations to all of them.”

    Chief Minister repeatedly says ‘stones, pellets, bombs, bofors would yield nothing. We witnessed 2008, 2010 and 2016 unrest. What we have achieved, nothing but only confusion and chaos. I think of a street vendor who came to me, seeking permission to sell goods at pavements. What he would be doing now a days. How he would be feeding his family”.

    Reiterating her commitment to address issues of concern Mehbooba Says “When I won the elections, I was determined to press Delhi to initiative dialogue and fulfill the economic and political aspirations of the people of J&K. 2016 unrest weakened my position in Delhi. When there are stones and bullets, to whom Delhi would talk to” Claiming that government has been working for the welfare of people, she says “despite unrest, you are witness that government supplied electricity, water and ration to the people. You (People) yourself closed schools and shops, how could I have helped you out”.

    “Give me conducive atmosphere and I promise for opening of all dialogue channels with everyone. Help me in restoring peace in the valley and I promise you that I will not let their heads go down. I promise to fulfill your all economic and political aspirations,” she tells people.

    “During the unrest, the well off people have sent their children to Delhi and those who could afford lesser have sent their wards to Jammu. It is only children of poor who have suffered in this unrest,” she laments. On the anniversary function of Mahatma Gandhi she said “the biggest tribute to Gandhiji would be “if we could stop the violence and initiate dialogue to resolve issues through negotiations.” 

    KNS / KASHMIR MAGAZINE / KASHMIR TODAY

  • Nayeem Akhter is thinking about our future and nothing else

    Original Text 

    Sir

    This is in reference to the previous article you posted An Open Letter To Education Minister Naeem Akhtar From 12th Class Students (Read Letter Here: https://goo.gl/zQvzYV )

    Protesting against exams is not a resort yes no doubt the circumstances are harsh but if our exams are scheduled to be held in march then it will be impossible for us to qualify any competitive exam. I agree that our syllabus was not completed but being a 12th class student you have to study all by yourself these must not be any excuses.
    I don’t want to hurt anyone’s sentiments and I agree that many innocent people died and were blinded but protesting against exams is not right. Mr. Nayeem Akhter is thinking about our future and nothing else. I can assure that no medical or non medical student wants their exams to be held in march. The students protesting right now belong to arts and commerce group and they’ve already completed their syllabus they don’t even have to appear in any competitive exam they are just simply trying to create menace. They are making excuses that we were not able to study but I belong to that area which has been attacked by grenades 2 time and still I have completed my syllabus. There are many students like me who are prepared to appear in exams and we don’t support the protest.

    Received From a 12th Class Student 

     

     

  • An Open Letter To Education Minister Naeem Akhtar From 12th Class Students

    Original Text

    Sir,
    We are really sad to be saying this, but you and your government has disappointed us deeply.
    Honestly speaking, when you became the education minister, your statements ignited  hope in us; the hope that our Education department will improve. Your statements were always student-friendly, but now it has turned out that they were only ‘statements’. You have proved to be just like any other ‘education’ minister that we have seen in the past, may be even worse.
    We are writing this letter to you in a last desperate attempt to get you to understand our point of view and then decide about our exams accordingly. We have tried everything Sir; from protesting peacefully on the streets to sending articles to newspapers and approaching the authorities; EVERY SINGLE THING, to get our point across, which after all is a valid point, if you think about it.
    Please consider yourself in our situation: You are in class 12; this class will decide your future, you go to school for barely 3 months, Burhan Wani is killed and Kashmir is on boil; 90 people are killed, thousands injured, maimed and blinded; some of your age too; some even younger, you’re traumatised, you try studying because you know you have to, you hear slogans being shouted on speakers, you see protests, you hear the sounds of bullets, sometimes suddenly everyone in your house starts coughing, your throat feels dry; you know pepper gas has been sprayed, you hear of people and  even kids being arrested everyday & so so many more things- this goes on for 3 months. In the meantime, you had tried to study, but could you study amidst all this? Of course your attempts didn’t all go in vain, you did study a little, but sir, you have to appear in your 12th Board Exams. The Education Minister says that you won’t get any sort of concession, you just have to appear in the exams for the full syllabus. What would you do?
    Sir, we have done every possible thing that we could do to tell the authorities about our awful situation, but they have given a cold shoulder to all our pleas.
    In this last attempt, we’d like to appeal to you, sir, to please give us some sort of relaxation in the exams. We’re not telling you that we won’t appear in the exams till we get Azadi, no, we will study and get educated and fight for our rights; but the fact remains that when you say you are ‘concerned’ about our future, you forget that Insha is one of us too. She wanted to become a doctor. She has been blinded forever.
    At this point of time, our request to you is just this; Please be a little considerate of the situation in which we’ve had to ‘study’, less than 50% of our syllabus has been completed at our schools and tutions, and this is 12th class that we’re talking about, not just any other class where the syllabus isn’t this vast and where your marks don’t have the power to decide your future; it wouldn’t matter if you got 50%- you passed and nothing’s wrong.
    You said you wouldn’t reduce the syllabus as we have to appear in ‘competitive exams’, but sir, if we are asked to appear in board exams with full syllabus without having been taught less than half of it, we won’t be in a position to even fill the forms of those competitive exams as there’s a certain good percentage of marks that is required to be eligible for them.
    This pressure and stress is taking a toll on our health now.
    We hope that you consider our request.
  • Look within

    Hilal Mir

    The perennial complaint of the state that the local media coverage is “biased, baseless, motivated” exists only because the state functionaries and its PR system have been largely unresponsive and unprofessional

    Why has been banned? This is the question I have been asked by several reporters, representatives of rights organisations, concerned colleagues and friends since Sunday evening, when a posse of policemen delivered at our office the Srinagar district magistrate’s gag order, intriguingly dated ‘30.9.2016’.
    The contents of the order are, more or less, self explanatory. It says the newspaper “contains such material and content which tends to incite acts of violence and disturb public peace and tranquillity”. Has the government pointed out such content to us or sought an explanation from us? No. The question therefore lingers. Why?

    There are no simple answers, although one can call it an assault on the freedom of speech and rest. A few days into the raging uprising, the state government asked newspapers to suspend publication for three days. The government spokesman said the government apprehended “trouble over the next three days and suspending publication was considered necessary”.
    And when it couldn’t handle the embarrassment triggered by international outrage, the chief minister’s advisor first denied that a ban had been imposed and requested the newspapers to resume the publication.
    When the government spokesman announces the ban and the CM’s advisor does the fire fighting, it shows the government’s capability to handle the fourth estate has taken a hit. A media gag at the peak of a mass uprising has far reaching consequences. The perfunctory manner in which the ban was announced should have spurred some introspection in the government.

    Instead, the ‘administration’ put the muzzle on Kashmir Reader. Only this time the gag order comes with legal armour, apparently to frighten the rest of the local media into submission.
    A day before the ban was imposed, one of our reporters called a senior police officer for information about a story. The officer told him that he should start looking for a job as Kashmir Reader would be shut down sooner or later. The officer labelled the newspaper as “Lashkar-e-Toiba’s own organ”. The conversation, which the officer would probably dismiss as a joke, is frightening. If a senior police officer perceives a newspaper as the property of a militant outfit, we naturally become the legitimate targets of a ‘surgical strike’.
    The same mindset is pervasive in the structure of the state. Hardly any official or minister expects a reporter to question him about a story in a detached, professional manner. The professional aloofness is considered an affront to the power.
    Media can function professionally in an atmosphere of mutual respect. A reporter’s job becomes easy when officials are available to answer to their queries. It becomes more important in emergency situations. Will a police officer’s belligerence help a young reporter grow professionally? Will it not colour his perception of the entire police force?
    The perennial complaint of the state that the local media coverage is “biased, baseless, motivated” exists only because the state functionaries and its PR system have been largely unresponsive and unprofessional.
    In a situation, where scores of events are occurring every day, isn’t it incumbent upon the government to proportionately strengthen its media outreach? Unlike Indian and international media outlets, the local media has to process a larger number of stories every day. Therefore, the state and its organs should be easily accessible for the local media so that the reportage is fair and balanced. No professional organisation would want to publish reports that do not carry as many sides of the story as possible.
    Now, Kashmir Reader has been accused of publishing content that “incites acts of violence and disturbs peace”. It would have been helpful if the gag order had made a mention of a specific report so that we could answer it.
    But in the absence of such communication, we assume that it is a generalised accusation. Newspapers were not published for three days but the ‘violence’ persisted. Who incited the violence during those three days? The government’s mishandling of the media springs from its wilful refusal to accept the reality on the ground. The state should take a hard look within to seek answers to who incites violence.
    It should ask itself whether the street is not further enraged when the chief minister makes a casual remark on the killing of children, rather than blaming the media which only reports her remark.
    The relations between the local media and the state government are complex. The masses are not familiar with such complexity. But the successive governments are fully aware of these dynamics. Suffice to say, it is unwise to hold media relations hostage to the whims of a few persons. While the media is always looking for self improvement, it would do the government good to reciprocate fairly and professionally.
    Author is editor Kashmir Reader.

     

  • Kashmir and the notorious world of TV News

    Umar Shah

    Ram Gopal Verma’s movie, Rann, released in 2010, and has a conversation between a journalist Anand Prakash Trivedi, played by Raj Pal Yadav and an aspiring Bollywood filmmaker Nandita Sharma played by Gul Panaag. Yadav asks Panag what she does? After hearing that the woman is a part of the film industry, Yadav tells Panag: “Madam, filmain toh hum bhi banate hain, magar hum usse NEWS kehtae hae (We (journalists) too make films. The only difference is that we call it NEWS).”

    Till July, 2015, there were as many as 403 TV news channels operational in India as per the figures put forth by the Indian government’s ministry of information and broadcasting. The only priority for these 24×7 news channels is to keep their screens buzzing with ‘Breaking and Exclusive News’ reports.

    Ahead of the 2014 polls, the BJP presented Narendra Modi as its Prime Ministerial candidate, declaring him as India’s promising face who could usher a revolution in economic development and upliftment of the downtrodden. The TV cameras started zooming their lenses at Modi’s every rally and every meeting. The prime ministerial candidate in return started selling the ‘Gujarat Model’. The news channels accepted it in its very form of originality- caring little to uphold the principles of journalism and confirm the veracity of Modi’s claims. Not even a single TV journalist dared to visit Gujarat, its far flung areas, its hamlets and its countryside to confirm the truth behind the model being marketed to India’s millions of voters, young and old, rich and poor, who were aspiring to find their country prosperous and worthy to live. The news channels accepted the BJP claims without even an iota of efforts to scrutinize them, despite knowing well how such claims would decide the future of India for next five years.

    Solid ground reporting remains elusive in today’s TV journalism in India. Gone are the days when reporters would tread the treacherous paths to capture truth, that often nestles under the shades of grey. It is now the Studio talk- the cheapest way to keep feeding the 24×7 beast.

    When CAG slammed the UPA regime over numerous ‘corruption gates’, news channels found it easier to copy paste the CAG findings. They worked little to examine the facts. The SCAM, SCAM, SCAM was the cry every news channel was making then. But how many of them have themselves gone through the documents to verify and ascertain?

    The foundation of journalism lies in the principle that Governments lie. In today’s world of TV journalism in India, the arguments, counter arguments, bizarre claims and jibes by governments and opposition are the prime sources of news. Tickers buzz with quotes, allegations and rants. “The CAG said the country had lost 1.76 lakh crores in spectrum allocation; we believed it, almost uncritically,” writes eminent Journalist Rajdeep Sardesai in his book The Election that changed India.

    2014 was the year of floods in Kashmir. Ravaging waters of Jehlum wreaked havoc in Valley’s most parts, submerging houses and destroying government as well as private properties worth thousands of crores. The TV News Channels turned blind eye towards the hardships people faced in the midst of the nature’s fury. The screens started showing the selective areas, housing mostly tourists, being rescued by the army. Army later charged 500 crore rupees from state government for its rescue operations in Kashmir but who gives a dam. The beast had a breakfast, lunch, dinner and he had slept that day quietly.

    Contrary to what TV cameras revealed to their audience about Kashmir getting entirely marooned, there were still major areas where waters didn’t reach. One among them was Hyderpora where anti-India resistance Syed Ali Geelani resides. However, the breaking news in the prime time was about Geelani being rescued by army from his house. When I later went to interview the octogenarian and told him what TV channels claimed, he laughed and laughed. I had interviewed Syed Ali Geelani for more than six times till then but never witnessed such a notorious laugh on his face ever. “Didn’t they say I hugged the army tightly when they came for my rescue,” he said and laughed again.

    During flood relief operations , a short video clip of approximately 3 minutes of duration was captured by an anonymous person in which an argument between the local Congress workers and JKLF activists was recorded. The TV news channels had to split their screens into 10 boxes and an issue of JKLF stealing the rescue boat was discussed at threadbare. India’s ‘eminent faces’ including the former army Generals, writers, self proclaimed social activists were roped in to ridicule ‘PAK Agent Malik’. A former army general even shouted during the debate that it is Pakistan that has mandated its agents in Kashmir to create disruption in relief distribution so that it could regain a constituency in the region.

    The channel that was first to air this anonymous video with the hashtag ‘Exclusive: PAK thief exposed’, didn’t even bother to confirm the authenticity of the video ahead of airing it to millions of its viewers. It was finally the Bureau Chief of that channel who threatened to resign if views of the ‘accused party’ aren’t included. Furious, Yasin Malik was finally given a chance to appear as a guest on the channel. What we saw before the JKLF chief’s screen turned blank was he furiously telling the news anchor ‘You are a mental patient and you immediately need a psychiatrist.’

    Post 2014 witnessed the emergence of ISIS and Pakistan flags during protests in old city of Srinagar. Such pictures turned enough for the TV news anchors to declare ISIS presence in Kashmir. As the first protest got a massive prime time chuck, next Friday saw the number of these flags doubled. I asked a stone thrower in old city about the reason behind the waiving of such flags during protests. “We eagerly wait for 9.P.M news in our homes every Friday. We see people fighting and screaming over the issue. We see how flags are encircled with red colour and shown for hours with commercials staring celebrities,” was how he put forth the reason. But does he and others, waving such flags know what it really means? “It means nothing for us but everything for the news channels.”

    Today, when Kashmir is reeling under constant curfew, strikes and clashes, the TV news channels have exposed their Kashmir correspondents to serious threats. These ‘sound-bite hungry soldiers’ can’t freely walk in civilian areas, leave alone covering any public event. If you watch them on TV giving Piece to Camera (PTC) on Kashmir’s roads, believe it that the road is either deserted or guarded by the forces’ personnel.

    We have seen how TV journalists were thrashed and beaten up by people in hospitals where injured were rushed after post July 8 protests. We have seen how resistance leaders have barred these correspondents from covering any of their events. We have seen people sensing India’s mood about Kashmir’s plight through these media houses results in more anger, more protests and more killings.

    Whether these channels would ever rise up from the wild accusations, bizarre claims and uncalled for provocations is yet to be seen. All we can say at present is that these channels whose screens keep buzzing like the monitors at the airports announcing flight schedules, have so far contributed much in brewing up the anger that we witness sauntering on Kashmir’s every street. May Journalism prevail in its true sense and meaning!

    (Umar Shah is a journalist based in Kashmir. If you wish to contribute to Kashmir Today, Please send your submissions to [email protected])

  • BJP’s arrogance is costing peace in Kashmir

    Congress understood that people have grievances and it sought to address those grievances with a time-bound programme for socio-economic stabilisation

    Salman Nizami

    The sudden turmoil in the Kashmir, though it appears is a reaction to Burhan Wani’s encounter, has much deeper roots. The hyper nationalist rants of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), in particular its misleading propaganda in Kashmir, has created a fear of persecution among the politically sensitive people of Jammu Kashmir.

    Burhan’s death only provided people an outlet to bring out what had been simmering beneath the surface ever since the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and BJP joined hands to form the government in the Himalayan state.

    The tension in Kashmir is always simmering beneath the surface because there is no political dialogue involving all affected parties. In the dialogues that take place, voice of the youth and their aspirations are not adequately represented.

    The national media is playing the role of a spoilsport by depicting the Kashmiri’s in a rather distasteful manner, which is further alienating the youth of Kashmir from rest of India, and it is also creating mistrust in the Kashmiris. Under these circumstances, it is but natural that an incident like Burhan Wani’s killings will kindle the resentment that is present underneath.

    The BJP is immensely disliked in Kashmir and its ascent to power itself had created near alienation in the people. Though the youth would like to believe in the political leadership of the state and join the mainstream in order to become a part of the progress story of India, the BJP’s posturings undid the years of hard work of the previous Congress disposition.

    Before the turmoil first started in 2008 (in recent years), the Ghulam Nabi Azad led government had achieved massive success in winning the trust of the people. He had convinced them to look up to India’s participatory politics. Azad is still remembered as the Chief Minister who worked at the ground level and connected to people.

    During Azad’s time, a slew of measures were initiated that aimed at the socio-economic emancipation of the youth in Kashmir. Winning people’s trust in a conflict region is an extremely painstaking task, but Azad made some very good advances. That was a time when people were trying to come out of the shadow of the 1990s. People were fatigued and wanted new opportunities after a decade and half long turmoil.

    Congress was in power both at the Centre and in the state that time. It started a dialogue with the youth. We are not saying, stone pelting did not happen in those years, but the Congress never reacted with a muscle-flexing nationalism. Congress understood and acknowledged the fact that people have grievances and it sought to address those grievances with a time-bound programme for socio-economic stabilisation.

    Had it approached the issue with a “Bharat Mata ki Jai” theatrics, crushing every opposing voices, people in Kashmir would not be able to come out from the pessimism and outrage of the 1990s. But, the Congress reached out to the protesters with the spirit and large-heartedness of a mature democracy.

    Resisting the urge to take people to task, it accelerated efforts to provide them the best amenities, bring a change in their lifestyle, and thus, control the situation.

    Azad in the state and PM Manmohan Singh at the Centre opened new colleges, new hospitals, and a host of other civic facilities. People were given the impression that they are indeed the part of a progressing economy. Their cities were improving. New gardens were added. Azad built so many new districts and the existing ones were given a facelift. New scholarship programmes meant that the youth who was going stray now found hope for a better future.

    Intervention was also made in the lives of the poor. The services of casual labourers were regularised; new jobs were generated. Industrial units were launched, and loans were provided to small scale business start-ups on a subsided rate. Women were absorbed into lucrative jobs in the Aanganwadis and they were also provided employment through projects like Udaan and Khidmat.

    NREGA also generated jobs. Slowly but steadily the mindset of the people began to change. People in Kashmir started thinking in terms like, this government is working. Let’s give it a chance. Of-course the Amarnath Yatra row in 2008 was a setback.

    But in a display of unparalleled grace, Azad resigned as CM no sooner than three lives were lost in the clashes between protesters and forces. Which other political party will show such principle? Least of it is expected from the BJP, which is furthering the agenda of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), even though the latter has absolutely no mandate to make policy decisions.

    Even when the National Conference (NC) formed the government in Kashmir, Congress continued to play a constructive role as an ally. There were summer unrests in 2009 and 2010 but the reason why people pacified at the end and normalcy returned, was because the Congress treated the protesting crowds as mere protesters rather than bay for their blood and dub them anti-nationals. This is the fundamental difference in the approach of the Congress and the BJP.

    The Congress wants to talk, listen, co-exist amid differences. For the BJP, either you join them in their so-called nationalist rants or you go to Pakistan. There is no possibility for a debate, and consequently, no scope for a peaceful settlement of differences.

    Ever since it came to power in Kashmir, it is doing everything that will send the Kashmiris back to the uncertainty of the 1990s. It debuted in Kashmir with a sinister beef ban drive. Any Kashmiri will vouch that mutton and chicken are the primary diet and beef is eaten by a small section of people.

    But it seemed the BJP was only espousing this campaign to incite violence against the Muslims in JK. And violence did surface, finally. One Kashmiri truck driver was ghastly set ablaze in Jammu. His fault was that he was rumoured to have been cooking beef. First of all what is the incentive of banning beef in a Muslim majority state, if not for sheer domination?

    The BJP’s vile agendas didn’t stop here. It brought in the RSS cadre in Jammu. The RSS soon intensified its activities in Jammu where the Muslims already live in a perennial fear of being subjugated. The RSS cadre marched through the streets in Jammu with weapons in their hands. Which democracy in this planet will allow such a spectacle? But, BJP deliberately did this to send in a message to Muslims in JK that their days as free and equal citizens were over. In the name of women emancipation, the RSS started imparting arms training to females.

    The outcome of all of BJP’s nefarious designs and activism was that the Muslims in the state, in particular in Kashmir, started harbouring a latent resentment against the state. Just think of the damage it did to Azad’s and Congress’ re-conciliatory measures of a decade.

    The mutiny was building and the killing of Burhan provided the final trigger. Eighty nine killed in last 82 days and yet people are not retreating from the streets that have almost become warfields. This is so because while in the times of the Congress, the protesters had some hope that the government will sit on the negotiating table and hear their grievances, the crowd now is totally disillusioned, thanks to BJP’s muscle-flexing ways and Hindutva posturing.

    While we do hope the violence subsides, the fascist tendencies of the BJP may just invite a repeat of 1990, with India’s image as a secular, democratic nation taking a great beating at the world stage. To control the current situation in Kashmir, the pellet guns should be banned; high handed ways should be avoided. Government should see that those who killed 88 innocent Kashmiris in last two months be immediately punished by fast track courts, that would make up for the great mistrust this present PDP-BJP govt has generated.

    Most importantly, National media should give some platform to Kashmiri’s to air their version of the story too, instead of continuously demonising them.

    Author is associated with Congress and can be mailed at [email protected]

  • In service of humanity, a life ends of a sudden

    ANANTNAG: On the evening of September 12 when some injured policemen and civilians were rushed to district hospital Anantnag, the officials in the hospital laboratory on night duty started phoning their colleague, Bilal Ahmad Dar, who had left the hospital at 4pm as usual. After getting no response to their repeated calls they gave up calling him and started attending to the injured.Little did they know that their colleague was lying dead on a hospital bed.
    “One of his colleagues came rushing to me while I was standing in the hospital ward and asked about Bilal. As I pointed towards his dead body lying on a bed, he was shell shocked,” said Bilal’s elder brother, Dr Zahoor.Bilal was injured in a grenade attack hurled by unidentified persons on police station Sherbagh, a day before Eid-ul-Azha. He was pronounced “brought dead” at the hospital. Bilal was working as a laboratory technician in district hospital Anantnag for the past six-seven years. His temporary job had been confirmed only eight months ago.
    Survived by aged parents, wife, and two little daughters aged 7 and 3 years, Bilal, according to his brother, had served the injured people during the ongoing uprising with all his spirit. bilal-ahmad-dar
    “For almost the entire first week of the uprising, he stayed at the hospital round the clock. He was highly dedicated and God-fearing,” Zahoor said.
    Neighbours and colleagues remember him as a social worker. “He would devote his leisure time to social service. It was because of his spirit to serve the poor that he associated himself with a local ‘Syed-us-Saadat’ trust,” said his neighbour Showkat Ahmad. Ahmad said, “Besides being humble and dedicated, Bilal was also very intelligent. He was an ardent reader of Islamic literature and other subjects. He was living his life according to Islam.”
    Bilal’s brother Dr Zahoor said that such killings would continue to happen in Kashmir unless and until Kashmir issue is resolved. “India has been harsh in its approach to Kashmir. We appeal the world community to wake up and help in resolving this issue so that Kashmiris, too, can live their lives with peace,” Zahoor said. (Kashmir Reader)

  • WHO IS WINNING ?

    Khalid Tantray

    The current scenario in Kashmir is no different from that of a war. Three months of clampdown, more than 80 deaths and there seems no end to the conflict. These statistics are absolutely disturbing for the common masses, while for those at the helm of affairs it’s just a clash of “percentages”. But there are some alarming questions that we, the common Kashmiris need to ponder over, WHO IS WINNING ? Are we even getting close to achieving what we dream of? As far as the developments regarding the issue and the seriousness or to be apt, lack of seriousness, of those in the seats of power goes it doesn’t look like that we are! It’s high time to introspect whether the methods that we are using are effective or as it seems to me, counterproductive. I am compelled to say this having seen the horrific and worrying scenes almost at every place that I visited during these months. Kids, aged just 5 or 10 at the most, are out on the roads with hands full of stones. Not knowing what they are doing this for, they just stop every vehicle, hurl stones on every person irrespective of whether it’s a civilian or otherwise. But then, that is bound to happen, isn’t it? They are immature minds, but, at the same time, they are keen observers. They have been observing everything painstakingly. They are just emulating what they’ve been seeing all around. A quote popping up in my mind rightly describes the point – “Children are great imitators, so give them something great to imitate” It’s not an attempt to show the movement in bad light. We just need to think about this with an open mind. Are we going to ruin the future of the nation that we are fighting to free from the oppressors? Are we ready to pay this price having paid with our lives already? These young buds that should be enjoying this time of their lives and not caring about anything else have been pushed to the wall. Even at this time of misery and great sorrow, the parents are duty-bound to counsel their wards. We cannot let the situation make a dreadful impact on the minds of our gen-next. At the same time, those in control of the situation should ask themselves whether they’re really doing any good to this movement by creating such repercussions. “The children of any nation are its future. A country, a movement, a person that doesn’t value its youth and children does not deserve its future” – Oliver Tambo