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  • Separatists using every opportunity to fan anti-India sentiments: Rajnath

    Kevadia (Gujarat): Home Minister Rajnath Singh Thursday hit out at separatists in Jammu and Kashmir, saying they exploit every possible situation to fan anti-India sentiments and incite the people.u
    Inaugurating the annual conference of Directors General and Inspectors General of Police at the site of the tallest statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel in Gujarat, the home minister said the Pakistan establishment is seeking to forge an alliance between the Sikh extremist groups, their country’s Islamist outfits and Kashmir-focused terrorists to hurt Indian interests.
    “The separatists exploit every possible situation to agitate the people, to fan anti-India sentiments which lead to law and order situations. Financing from across the border for militants and separatists is a cause of concern,” he said.
    Singh said Pakistan has been perpetrating militant activities on Indian soil from Jammu and Kashmir to Punjab. The security situation in the hinterland and in Jammu and Kashmir continues to be vitiated even though stone pelting incidents have declined, he said.
    “Attempts by militants to infiltrate in large numbers, intermittent attacks and efforts at local recruitment continue. Terror infrastructure in Pakistan and PoK remains in the form of training camps, launching pads and communication control stations,” Singh said.
    The home minister asked the security establishment to check efforts to revive militancy in Punjab.
    He said recent terror incidents in Punjab and related interdiction indicate concerted efforts on part of the Pakistan establishment and Sikh extremist elements based in Pakistan to revive terrorism in the border state with active support from Sikh radical and extremist entities based abroad, especially Europe and America.
    “Pakistan establishment is seeking to forge an understanding between Sikh extremist groups and Pakistan-based Islamist outfits as well as Kashmir-centric terrorist groups for targeting Indian interests,” he said.
    Singh said militancy in the hinterland has been stamped out and the law enforcement agencies, through concerted action coordinated by Intelligence Bureau, have managed to thwart the first tide of propaganda and mobilisation by Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
    “Consequently, India witnessed very few incidents of IS-inspired violence. In concerted counter-terrorism operations, law enforcement agencies have arrested nearly 125 suspected terrorists this year as against 117 arrested in 2017,” he said.
    He said the new phase of Islamic State propaganda emanating from Afghanistan-Pakistan region was being countered effectively.
    The home minister said economic installations and iconic institutions are also being continuously targeted from across the western border through espionage and cyberspace.
    “Pakistan continues to abet terrorism and during the period January 1, 2017 to November 29, 2018, as many as 17 ISI-backed espionage modules have been neutralised in the country resulting in the arrest of 25 espionage agents which include two Pakistanis.
    “Various sensitive organisations, including the Indian Army, Air Force, Navy, ITBP, DRDO, BSF, CRPF, MEA, Airport Authority of India, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas and the Indian Railways, have been targeted by PIOs from across the border through spoofed/crank calls to elicit sensitive information,” he said.
    The conference of Directors General and Inspectors General of Police is being held at the site of the tallest statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel in Gujarat.
    The 182-metre ‘Statue of Unity’ of Patel was inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Gujarat’s Narmada district on October 31. Taller than the Statue of Liberty in the US, the Statue of Unity has been built on islet Sadhu Bet near the Sardar Sarovar Dam.
    The conference is an annual affair where senior police officials of the states and the Centre meet and discuss issues related to internal security, crimes and related challenges, another official said.
    The Modi government has been organising this meeting outside the national capital since it came to power in 2014.
    The last four conferences were held in Guwahati, Rann of Kutch in Gujarat, Hyderabad and Tekanpur in Madhya Pradesh’s Gwalior district.
    The Statue of Unity was first conceptualised by Modi during his tenure as Gujarat chief minister. He had laid the foundation stone for it in 2013.
    Patel, also India’s first deputy prime minister, was credited with merging of over 500 princely states into the Union of India. PTI

  • Winds of change’ damaging PDP at grass root level, admits party

    ‘Party will go before people with a promise of resolution of Kashmir issue’

    Party will go before people with a promise of resolution of Kashmir issue’

    Srinagar: Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) on Thursday admitted that the winds of change that has resulted in the leaders resigning or expelled from the party has affected the party at the grass root levels.

    The party makes a candid admission that despite receiving severe jolts, they would “go before the people with a promise of resolution of Kashmir issue.”

    PDP spokesman, Rafi Ahmad Mir while talking to KNO said that the party has suffered at the grass root levels after the leaders either resigned or were expelled from the party.

    “There is no doubt that every leader is important in the party. Naturally when he resigns or is being expelled, the party naturally suffers at the grass root level,” he said, adding that the resignations from leaders of being expelled are unfortunate for any party and that should not have been happened.

    “Such things usually happen in any party and we will also try to fill the gaps due to these developments,” he added. Asked about the possibility of new faces in the upcoming assembly elections, Mir said, “Yes there would be new faces as well in the assembly elections as the positions of leaders who have resigned or have been expelled are lying vacant. So, there are possibilities of new faces in the next polls.”

    About the party’s arrangements for the next polls, Mir said that the zone level meeting were convened which were presided over the by the party president in which the party’s position at grass root level was discussed falling the fall of PDP-BJP bonhomie in the State.

    “Now, we will be moving to district headquarters in which the workers will be geared up for the elections till the elections are announced in Jammu and Kashmir,” he added.

    He said every party in Jammu and Kashmir is in tight spot when it comes to the elections as the atmosphere here is not conducive and the party’s can’t gear up for the polls amidst such situation.

    Asked about the party’s prime agenda in the next polls, Mir said, “The two parties that forged an alliance in the State including PDP and BJP put its agendas at the back burner and now we will go before the people on our own and will promise the people for the resolution of Kashmir issue.”(KNO)

  • KEA condemns charges of attempt to murder against JKLF chief Yasin Malik

    SRINAGAR: The Kashmir Economic Alliance Chairman Muhammad Yasin Khan has condemned the police charges of attempt to murder against senior Resistance leader Muhammad Yasin Malik and his associates.

    In a statement Yasin Khan said it was unfortunate that the ailing leader who heads JKLF has been booked for attempt to murder for merely having staged peaceful protests against right violations in Kashmir.

    Khan said such pressure by the Raj Bhawan was only pushing the soft separatism towards the wall. “Is protesting against the killing of seven innocent civilians a crime?”

    Seeking intervention of the lawyers’ fraternity, Khan said when people are booked for murder for merely holding peaceful protests the state of policing can only be imagined.

    Khan said the development of booking innocents for such frivolous charges would only set a bad precedence.

    Khan appealed the Indian civil society to rise to the occasion when even raising voice against human rights abuse is being seen as crime in Kashmir.

    A court here Wednesday sent chairman of Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front, Yasin Malik to four days remand after police brought charges of attempt to murder against him and his associates.

  • Why Kashmiris love their ‘pherans’

    Any attempt to tinker with this sense of identity is bound to have a severe backlash

    Many took to Twitter to express their love for Pheran

    Kashmiris love their ‘pherans’. These loose, warm outer garments are typically worn during winters. They are comfortable, practical and as Kashmiri as lungi is to a Malayali or kilt to the Scottish. Given the valley’s surcharged political atmosphere, and an ongoing insurgency that has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives in the recent decades, the last thing Kashmiris expected is a ban on their beloved ‘pheran’.

    Yesterday (December 18), the social media was abuzz after the state’s school education department banned people from wearing the traditional ‘pheran’ in its offices. A local English daily said the development came in the backdrop of a similar ban on the pheran in Srinagar’s civil secretariat, the seat of power in the state, where people visiting the administrative departments have to take off their pherans at the main gate.

    The report triggered an outrage. Everyone from Omar Abdullah, the former Chief Minister of J&K, to ordinary Kashmiris were aghast. Soon hashtags like #Pheranlove and #PheranIsMyIdentity began to trend on Twitter. Many directed their ire at the governor, Satya Pal Malik, who has recently recommended President’s rule in the volatile state after the governor’s rule expired (six months after Mehbooba Mufti’s government fell). Although the orders for a pheran ban didn’t originate from the governor’s office, many Kashmiris, deeply sceptical of the ruling dispensation in Delhi, felt that it was a ploy to trample upon their culture.

    ‘Pheran’ has a long, storied history in Kashmir, and is believed to have a tradition of at least 660 years. Worn over centuries by the inhabitants to brave the harsh winter chill, the garment has worked as a great leveller of the Kashmiri society. It has traditionally dissolved the class difference, being the preferred dress for both the rich and the poor during the cold season. Even when modernity permeated the lives of Kashmiris over the years, the pheran continued to remain a badge of its culture.

    Though the etymology is a little unclear, some believe the name pheran is derived from the Greek word ‘apron’. Many contend that the tunic owes its origin to the Persian word for shirt,‘perahan’. The Tajik word ‘peraband’ is also closely associated with the Kashmiri pheran. Since Kashmir has a distinct central Asian cultural link, that may well be the case. A totem of Kashmir’s simple, egalitarian past when the garment united people, pheran has undergone changes during recent times. Modern pherans have several variants with tailors and designers shaping it in distinct styles.

    Not only Kashmir’s own political class (mainstream as well as separatists), celebrities and leaders have adorned pheran from time to time. Sonia Gandhi, whose husband Rajiv Gandhi’s family has Kashmiri roots, can be often spotted in social gatherings in the Kashmiri attire. World leaders like Hillary Clinton too have worn the pheran on several occasions. Various Bollywood film stars and celebs have turned out in pherans while shooting in the hills of Kashmir.

    In the valley, both Muslims and Pandits (Kashmiri Hindus) have historically worn the garment. Therefore a ban on pheran is not only seen as parochial but also somewhat scandalous, given the Indian right-wing’s obsession with cultural appropriation and dietary habits of minorities in the country. While there may not be a larger game plan at play to target the much-beloved pheran, any attempt to tinker with Kashmir’s much-vaunted sense of identity is bound to have a severe backlash. Having lost thousands to a wretched conflict, Kashmiris are unwilling to part with a distinct feature their collective identity.

    Courtesy: Gulf News

  • Farooq Abdullah should stop dreaming about autonomy: Kavinder Gupta

    SRINAGAR: Reacting over the statement of National Conference President Farooq Abdullah, Senior BJP leader and former Jammu and Kashmir deputy chief minister Kavinder Gupta said, “Farooq Abdullah should not dreaming adding that there is nothing like autonomy.

    While speaking to News agency Press Trust of Kashmir Gupta said that Kashmir is internal part of India and “autonomy like statement are anti-national”. On assembly elections, he said BJP also demand early elections in Jammu and Kashmir. He added, “Until BJP is in center, there is nothing like Autonomy. People in Kashmir are free. They don’t need any kind of freedom”.

    Gupta said, “Governor Administration is doing good work but elected government is important. BJP also demand early elections in Jammu and Kashmir”. (PTK)

  • Kashmiri Teenagers Are Dying to Protect Militants

    By Sameer Yasir / The NewYork Times

    BALSOO, Kashmir — It was well past midnight in the village of Balsoo when Numan Ashraf Bhat’s phone lit up with an urgent WhatsApp message: “Umar surrounded by forces.”

    Umar Majid Ganai, one of the area’s most wanted militants, had built a loyal youth following in Kashmir, a Himalayan region disputed between India and Pakistan where violence has claimed tens of thousands of lives. Numan, a gangly 16-year-old, was one of his most enthusiastic supporters — all of the photos downloaded on his phone were of Mr. Ganai.

    So when Numan learned last month that Mr. Ganai was holed up in a tiny hamlet, Indian security forces closing in, he jumped on his motorbike and sped through the biting cold to reach the house where several militants were trapped.

    Hundreds of Kashmiri civilians had already gathered. They were forming a protective ring to block Indian officers from advancing, part of a new and often fatal development in the decades-long struggle over Kashmir.

    Violence is rising again in the region, where India has presided over a bloody campaign to hunt down those fighting a quixotic battle for independence. This year, according to police officials in Kashmir, Indian security forces have killed over 240 militants, the highest annual toll in more than a decade.

    But along with the combatants’ deaths has come a new set of casualties: those of civilians who try to defend them. Gone are the days when the sight of an armored vehicle was enough to send entire villages into hiding. Now, civilians are rushing in front of the heavily armed trucks, using stones and their own bodies to try to block security forces.

    Last week, seven civilians were killed after inserting themselves between militants and advancing officers.

    “This is a new phenomenon,” said Sheikh Showkat Hussain, an international law professor at the Central University of Kashmir. “Civilians have always supported militants, but never with such conviction.”

    This year, rights groups say, at least 148 civilians have been killed. Many were teenagers.

    For decades, Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan have fought for control of Kashmir, sending millions of troops to square off along a disputed border hundreds of miles long.
    In June, the United Nations released its first report on atrocities committed in Kashmir, calling for an international investigation into reports of sexual violence and torture. Indian security forces were sharply criticized for using excessive force on protesters, and particularly for firing shotguns into crowds, with hundreds of people struck in the eyes by pellets, leaving many of them blind.

    India has pushed back against criticism of its methods. After the release of the United Nations report, the government called its contents “fallacious, tendentious and motivated.” Last year, Bipin Rawat, the Indian Army chief, said that people who “obstruct our operations” would be “treated as over-ground workers” — in other words, collaborators.

    In 2016, the nature of civilian protests took a turn when Burhan Muzaffar Wani, a charismatic militant leader with a vast following on social media, was fatally shot in the Indian-administered part of Kashmir.

    Kashmiris poured into homegrown militant groups like Hizbul Mujahideen. A network of locals who fed information to Indian intelligence officers temporarily broke down, allowing the number of militants to swell.

    Pakistan’s role in supplying arms and recruits also receded, according to Kashmiri police officials, though Western intelligence officers say Pakistan is still actively supporting several militant groups.

    Yasin Malik, a separatist leader who led an armed struggle against Indian security forces in the late 1980s and early 1990s, said the ranks of militant groups would continue to grow. A peaceful resolution in Kashmir became impossible, he said, when locals who tried demonstrating against the police continued to meet “brute force.”

    “There is no space for a nonviolent political movement,” he said. “They are fighting because everyone has failed them.”

    Of the approximately 250 known militants today, Kashmiri police say only 50 or so are from Pakistan. Most of the rest are poorly trained and have never left the Kashmir Valley. Though Indian security forces stationed in the valley have cracked down on armed insurgents, outnumbering the militants 1,000 to one, they are struggling to stem fresh recruitment.

    Numan Ashraf, a high school student, knew the risks of traveling those 15 miles to the village of Batgund, where Mr. Ganai was holed up in a house with other militants. His friendship with a wanted militant is a window into the growing civilian support for the homegrown fighters — and the deadly risks of such a relationship.

    Numan, the oldest of three sons of a woodcutter, was born into a tense security situation and seemed acutely aware of it. Every summer, his family said, Numan and his friends dressed up as militants or Indian army officers, hid behind apple trees and fired fake wooden guns at each other.

    Over the years, Numan also met Mr. Ganai, 27, several times, his friends said. They played cricket and went swimming in a pond together. During a chaotic funeral for another militant, Numan spotted Mr. Ganai and hugged him.

    It is unclear who told the Indian authorities where to find Mr. Ganai, a senior member of Hizbul Mujahideen who had avoided detection for several years. The authorities said the list of charges against him was long. Last year, he was implicated in killing several police officers guarding a bank’s cash van.

    In the early morning of Nov. 25, hundreds of Indian army and police officers blocked roads leading into Batgund with barbed wire. A crowd of civilians gathered, hurling stones from narrow alleys and screaming anti-India slogans from their balconies. The authorities fired tear gas canisters, creating a choking, eye-stinging pall of gray smoke.
    Indian security forces had the house where Mr. Ganai was hiding out completely surrounded. By the time Numan reached Batgund at 7:30 a.m., the security officers had already killed several insurgents. Mr. Ganai was one of the last holdouts.

    Young protesters, desperate to save the fighters, tried to drive the Indian forces back or create enough chaos to distract them to give the last militants a chance to slip away. It had happened before that insurgents melted into a sea of civilians and vanished right in front of security officers.

    Mr. Ashraf and several friends moved closer. They entered a small, relatively unguarded lane in the house’s courtyard, looking for a way to help Mr. Ganai escape. The scene was quiet for a moment.

    Numan shouted, “Umar, come out!”

    Gunfire rang out. Numan clutched his chest. “I am hit! It is burning inside,” he told his friends as they carried his bleeding body to a motorbike.

    Numan died on the way to the hospital. Later that morning, Mr. Ganai was shot dead.

    When asked about the shooting, Indian officials said it had been an accident; Numan had been too close to the militants.

    “Who wants to kill a young boy?” asked Swayam Prakash Pani, the area’s police chief, who was not present for the shooting but had been briefed about it.

    Several witnesses contested that claim, saying they had seen a soldier pointing a gun at Numan from a balcony and that the shooting had been deliberate.

    Over the next couple of days, thousands of mourners gathered for a marathon of funerals, one after the other, spreading the grief. In Balsoo, the streets were so clogged with people that prayers for Numan were divided into four sessions.
    Mohammad Ashraf Bhat, tall and broad-shouldered, said he could not fault his son for trying to protect Mr. Ganai.

    “The mind says if you jump into fire, you will burn,” he said. “But love doesn’t understand that. If he would not have died like this, he would have died as a militant.”

    Two days after Numan’s death, his younger brother, Nadeem, 14, took his place. He traveled to a village near Balsoo where more militants were trapped. He picked up stones and threw them at police officers, who shot a pellet into his leg.

    That night, he did not eat or tell his parents what had happened. A single emotion consumed him: passion.

    “The sentiment of freedom is in our blood,” he said. “It will outlive us.”

    The Article Was First Published on The NewYork Times.

  • Are Kashmiris Not Indian Citizens?

    Nazir Masoodi

    During the 2010 civilian unrest in Kashmir, an all-party delegation led by then Home Minister P Chidambaram visited the Valley to reach out to people and find a way to resolve the crisis. During an interaction in Tangmarg, a young man asked the team members why they didn’t feel pain when a part of their body was bleeding – “How is it possible that my arm is being amputated and my body doesn’t feel the pain?” The delegation, which included parliamentarians like Arun Jaitley — now Finance Minister – was stunned by the young Kashmiri man’s words.
    In the middle of the unrest in which more than 100 civilians were killed by the forces and slogans of “Azadi” were heard across the Valley, the man was trying to ask a group of national leaders whether they considered him a citizen of India. If yes, why didn’t the laws that protect every citizen’s rights in the country apply to Kashmiris?

    On Saturday, seven civilians, among them four teenage students — the youngest just 14 — were killed in firing by security forces in Pulwama. Videos showing the troops firing at running youth are in circulation. There is little to guess on what happened that morning, shortly after three militants and a soldier were killed in an encounter.

    The teens had bullet wounds above the waist – in their chest, neck and head. Scores received bullet and pellet injuries.

    Months before a national election, such a tragedy would have become a huge political issue, had it taken place in any other part of the country. Heads would have rolled; political leaders would have rushed to console the victims’ families.

    Mandsaur in Madhya Pradesh, the epicenter of farmer protests in June last year during which five farmers were killed in police firing, became a major reason for the exit of the BJP and its formidable chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan “Mamaji (uncle)” after 15 straight years in power. The media also highlighted the victims. No one asked why the protesters were throwing stones and attacking the forces in Mandsaur.

    In the last three years, more than 300 civilians have been killed in Kashmir. Not a single incident was probed and not a single accused faced trial. More than 16,000 people were injured. The pellet horror has partially or fully blinded hundreds of people. But scarcely has one heard any national leader raising his voice against these civilian killings and mass blindings or seeking a judicial probe and telling countrymen that our citizens are being killed with impunity.

    Even pellet firing at 19-month-old baby girl Hiba was not enough to shake the nation’s conscience. The youngest pellet victim has already gone through two surgeries in her eye and doctors are still doubtful they can fully restore her eyesight.

    Mercifully, no one has accused her of stone-throwing.

    When Congress’ leader Ghulam Nabi Azad talked about security forces killing more civilians than militants, he was roasted for the comments. There was hope that things may change for the better when Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke about not bullets but hugs for Kashmiris in his Independence Day speech last year – “Na goli se na gaali se, Kashmir ki samasya suljegi galay lagane se. (Kashmir’s problems can be solved only by embracing its people, not with bullets or abuses).”

    Sadly, the words did not translate into reality.

    After each killing, the victims have been held responsible for their death.

    What they were doing at the site of an encounter is the most predictable question. Why they were killed is never asked. Much of the media describes firing on civilians as “clashes”, giving the impression that it is an even match and in a way, justifying it. Government and police handouts are structured on the same lines.

    After the Pulwama killings, Governor Satya Pal Malik, instead of taking action against accused, asked people not to rush to encounter sites. In other words, a hint that they were responsible for their own deaths. He didn’t condemn the massacre. No probe was ordered to fix responsibility. The state police have literally abdicated their duties.

    After the Supreme Court order putting on hold the FIR against Army officer Major Aditya, who was accused of killing of three civilians in firing in January, there is an unwritten rule that every police station is following – not to file any FIR against security forces.

    Don’t people of the country deserve to know why 8,000 citizens are missing in Kashmir? According to an organization that deals with missing people in Kashmir, the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons, these people were picked up by security forces and no one knows whether they are dead or alive. There are hundreds of unmarked graves and no one knows who is buried there. People were subjected to unspeakable torture and there were allegations of rape that have never been investigated. Long-pending cases of fake encounters and extra-judicial killings always beg the question – why is the law of the land not working in Kashmir?

    Recently, the Supreme Court dismissed a bunch of petitions filed by 750 army men challenging cases registered against alleged excesses in Manipur and Jammu and Kashmir. The top court said: “When there is loss of life, even in an encounter, shouldn’t the human life demand that it should be looked into and an investigation should be done?”

    In Kashmir, First Information Reports have largely been about recording deaths, ever since the Armed Forces (J&K) Special Power Act was enforced in the state in 1990. Yet, registration of FIRs was acting as a deterrent and helping calm tempers every time civilians were killed by the security forces.

    The people of Kashmir became citizens of India in 1954 through a presidential order. As the constitution says, they enjoy rights and privileges like any other Indian citizen. Their rights are also protected by Jammu and Kashmir’s own constitution and a separate Ranbir Penal Code. But in reality, it’s all confined to the law books and on the ground, constitution and civil rights have literally been kept in suspended animation. By the way, is there any lawyer in the Supreme Court who ever filed a petition or PIL on why laws in India are not being enforced in Kashmir to protect citizen rights?

    To begin with, New Delhi’s biggest confidence building measure in Kashmir would be to implement the constitution and the law, and to treat the people of Kashmir as equal citizens.

    Or is that too much to ask?

    (Nazir Masoodi is NDTV’s Srinagar Bureau Chief)

    Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the personal opinions of the author.

  • Deputy Mayor Sheikh Imran Trashes Criticism, Says Hospitals His Domain

    SRINAGAR — Dismissing the criticism by a section of doctors and traders that he was overstepping his domain by cheking healthcare facilities in the city hospitals, Deputy Mayor, Shiekh Imran Wednesday said Srinagar Muncipality was the licencing authority of the hospitals and health centres and he was only performing his duty.

    Imran had earlier given a dressing down to doc­tors at Chest Disease Hispital Srinagar asking them to improve the healthcare following death of a patient allegedly due to their negligence. “Negligence of doc­tors at the hospital has led to the death of an elderly woman whose beloved were crying for the help in the premises of the hospital, when I reached there,” Imran told reporters.

    However eve as a faction of the doctors have reacted sharply to his directive ask­ing doctors to improve the healthcare, Imran said that he was supported on the is­sue by majority of the doctors.

    Imran said that he did’nt misbehave with the doctors, but rather asked them to im­prove the healthcare. He said that he visited the Chest Dis­ease hospital to “improve the situation there.”

    “I want to seek forgiveness in case I have used any abu­sive language but I want to urge the doctors not to go for strike as it will only add to the miseries of the patients”, Imran said.

    He added he has not fired any public servant but has sought that the matter of negligence of the doctors that left an ailing woman dead should be taken up with the Chief Secretary.

    “In case I have used any un-parliamentary language, then I am very sorry for that but don’t make the people suffer,” he said.

    “I understand there are shortcomings so far as infrastructure is concerned and I want concerned to bring it in our notice”.

    “The change has begun and we will not tolerate suffering of people any more”, he claimed.

    In a video that had earlier gone viral, Deputy Mayor had during his visit to the hospital asked that doctor that instead of sitting in his room, he should have attended the duties. The video shows a patient also complaining about the lack of healthcare in the hospital.

    Imran had also asked the doctors that it was their duty to attend to the patients and said that there was “no way they could have justified the lack of patient care” at the hospital. In the video, he is seen to have been seeking an explanation from the doctor.

    DAK Protests Measures To Improve Health Care

    Doctors Association Kashmir (DAK) on Wednesday reacted sharply to the direc­tive of Deputy Mayor, Sheikh Imran, to improve healthcare at CD hospital. In a statement it as Imran to, “stick to his domain while deploring his misbehav­iour with the doctors.”

    DAK president, Dr Suhail Naik said that such interference is a common phenomenon and “we warn him to mind his own work. The hospitals are working round the clock in every situation.”

    “He (Deputy Mayor) should have learned morals before talk­ing to a doctor. It does not seem that he has taken education from a foreign country. We want to tell him to learn from Rural educational institute so that he can get some manners to behave with doctors, ” he said while condemning Imran’s behaviour.

    “It is not SMC that is paying us; we are being paid through the taxes of people. He should return the money that he owes the bank, rather than telling doctors that

    EJAC Sees Dy Mayor’s Directive To Improve Healthcare ‘Shameful’

    President Employees Joint Action Committee (EJAC), Abdul Qayoom Wani, came to the rescue of negligent doc­tors of CD hospital saying it strongly condemns the “abu­sive language”and misbehav­iour of Deputy Mayor Srinagar with doctors and paramedical staff on duty at chest disease hospital Dalgate. In a state­ment, Wani termed the inci­dent “shameful and unaccept­able to the employee fraternity because employees of the state are serving the people of J&K.” He said, “ the employees of the Health department including doctors and paramedical staff are discharging their duties in difficult situations and are put­ting their sweat and blood for patient care.”

  • World SnowShoe Championship 2019: Kashmir’s Arif Laigroo to lead Kashmir SnowShoe athletes in Italy

    Srinagar: The four member Kashmir-based team would be taking part in the World SnowShoe Championship-2019 scheduled to be held in Val Di Non, Trentino, Italy from January 4 to 6, 2019. The team would be travelling to Italy from New Delhi on January 1 to join athletes from more than 30 countries in Val Di Non for the annual event.
    Lead by sports promoter Arif Laigroo who has been appointed as team manager by SnowShoe Federation of India, the team includes Gulzar Ahmad Khan, Mushtaq Bashir and Abid Hussain.

    “I am thankful to SnowShoe Federation of India for giving me chance to serve the sport of SnowShoe and also Italian Embassy in New Delhi for granting team visa,” Laigroo said.
    “Recently, Federation conducted SnowShoe event in Gulmarg and I saw how much potential Kashmir has got in this sport. It is way easier than traditional sport of skiing and other related sports. We don’t need to build a high-end infrastructure for hosting its international events and just need SnowShoe equipment and invite the athletes to Kashmir. In Italy I will try my best to promote Kashmir and invite athletes to our beautiful land,” he added.

  • 300-240= 250: IS THE OPERATION ALL-OUT WORKING?

    In May 2017 when Mehbooba Mufti was the chief minister and the chief of the Unified Command, top army officials flew from New Delhi to Srinagar to participate in a crucial security meeting where top officials of various security agencies also participated. The meeting was held in highly fortified army’s 15 Corps Badamibagh Headquarters where it was unanimously decided to roll out “Operation All-out” in a bid to wipe out new age militancy born after the killing of young HizbulMujahideen commander BurhanWani on July 8, 2016.
    From May to December 2017, 215 militants were killed including top commanders of HizbulMujahideen, Lashkar-e-Toiba and Jaish-e-Muhammad. Top security experts opine that after sustaining back to back jolts in 2017, Jaish-e-Muhammad militants, especially those who managed to infiltrate from PirPanjal range, carried out at least three major suicide attacks—two of them in Pulwama district. “The attacks were a message to Hizb and Lashkar to take a back seat for re-grouping and saving commanders who were on the government forces’ radar.”
    The top security officials believe that the winter months of 2017-2018 were utilized by the Hizb and Lashkar militants to “re-organise themselves and to re-group as well” and to some extent they succeeded. However, the forces changed their strategy by deciding to target top militant leadership and a hit-list was prepared. Police believes that top commanders were mainly responsible for the recruitment of local youth into militancy.
    The list of 25 commanders of Hizb, Lashkar-e-Toiba, Jaish, Tehreek-ul-Mujahideen and the Ansaar-Gazwatul Hind prepared by the forces went viral on various social networking sites. Though earlier it seemed difficult for the forces to catch the big fish, but according to police officers, on the basis of “renewed human intelligence supported by the technical intelligence” they gradually started zeroing-in on the top commanders who started falling one after another in the encounters, most of whom took placed in the restive Southern Kashmir.
    Director General of Police Dilbagh Singh said that many militant commanders had a habit of uploading videos and photographs on the social sites to lure the youth into militancy fold, but “the same also helps the forces to track the militants.”
    According to police, 2018 saw the killing of 240 militants, the highest ever since 2007, including 18 top commanders of Hizb, Lashkar, Jaish and AnsaarGazwatul Hind. Among the slain commanders were most wanted faces— SadaamPaddar, Sameer Tiger, AltafKachroo, Towseef Sheikh and Umar Ganai. But for the forces, the major success of the year was the killing of top most commander of Lashkar-e-ToibaNaveedJatt alias Abu Hanzallah, who escaped from police custody in February this year after killing two policemen who were accompanying him from Central Jail Srinagar to SMHS Hospital where he was brought for a check-up. Naveed, according to police records, had infiltrated from Kupwara sector in October 2012 when he was only 15. He remained active for two years and was arrested and lodged in Central Jail Srinagar. However, he managed to escape from SMHS Hospital. His successful bid to flee from the hospital triggered suspension of the then Director General of Prisons and the SSP also. Besides, the then DGP S P Vaid also issued directions barring medical check-up of prisoners in State-run hospital and instead made it obligatory that non-local or local militants in need of medical check-up be brought to police hospital only.” Naveed’s escape also resulted in the shifting of all non-local and local militants lodged in Central Jail to Jammu prisons.
    Now police, army and the CRPF have decided to track the movement of remaining seven top militants including three top most commanders, ReyazNaikoo, the chief operational commander of Hizb, Zeenatul Islam, who took over the reins of Al-Badr, and ZakirMoosa, the chief of AnsarulGazwatul Hind.
    While addressing the press men after the killing of top Lashkar commander Naveed at police control room (PCR) Srinagar, DGP Dilbagh Singh said that 240 militants were killed till November 15 this year while 250 were still active. DGP’s revelation about the number of active militants signifies that the security agencies had been earlier downplaying the number of active militants. If one goes by figures shared last winter, 300 militants were active. As many as 240 were killed this year, then there should have been just 60 militants active at present.
    A top police officer revealed to the Kashmir Ink that though 240 militants have been killed and that 250 more are active signifies that the there has been successful infiltration attempts and also some silent recruitment of militants. “Successful infiltration is possible given the terrain and dense forest cover along the LoC stretch in Kashmir’s Baramulla, Bandipora and Kupwara districts,” he said.
    However, DGP Dilbagh Singh said that there was zero militant recruitment since October this year. “Not a single case of militant recruitment was witnessed from October this year. Recruitment has gone down, stone pelting incidents too are down and there is a lot of improvement in law and order situation,” he said. “We will see a better tomorrow.”
    Now that the police assert no militant recruitment has taken place since October 2018, it indicates that before October there has been a militant recruitment “at a good pace” given the number of active militants at present. A police officer while replying to a query whether militancy would be wiped out from Kashmir given the pace forces are killing militants, said: “As long as infiltration continues, militancy can’t be done away with.” He also said that killing militants “was no solution” and “ultimately political handle is highly inevitable for the long lasting peace in the region.”
    Almost similar statement was echoed by the general officer commanding (GoC) of Srinagar-based 15 Corps, Lieutenant General AK Bhat, who stated that the military can only create conditions of normalcy. “Beyond that, the initiatives have to be at levels of good governance, politically talking to people. During the Vajpayee era, it has happened, and similar initiatives the government will take at the right moment. I am sure they will,” Bhat told a newspaper in an interview. He said one of the main things was to find the methods and means to convince the youth that the path of violence will not deliver anything.
    “And second, more importantly, is to work in the psychological space with the populace of Kashmir, to tell them that their future is far better in India than in Pakistan… that they are only being used as tools by the Jama’at, by the separatists and Pakistan,” he said. “Army’s role was to ensure that peace is maintained. Of course long-term solutions, the government have to look at them.”
    Talking to reporters on the sidelines of a function at Kapurthala, Punjab, recently, northern army commander Lieutenant General Ranbir Singh said that that initiatives taken by the government and forces had resulted in a decline in militancy as well as a drop in the number of “local youths being radicalised” in Kashmir.
    “Our operations are carried out in a very professional manner,” Singh said. “More importantly these successful operations are possible only because information regarding the movement of militants is now coming from local population, which is a very positive sign and indicates the decline of militancy. More than the number of militants killed, information from locals is a much encouraging and positive sign.”

    The Story Was First Published On Kashmir Ink (A Greater Kashmir Publication)