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  • Narendra Modi must begin talks in Kashmir before it is too late

    Islamism is on the rise in the Valley and the separatists are fast losing control of the street

    Barkha Dutt

    If you watched the captions that scream out at you from your TV screens every night, their flaming orange hues designed to add to the heat, you would think that complex truths of the turmoil in Kashmir can be squeezed into 140 characters – just perfect for the Twitter age. But, like Akira Kuroswa’s Rashomon (Four people give different accounts of a rape and a murder) taught us, there can be multiple truths. Here are eight truths about Kashmir, seemingly paradoxical; simultaneously truthful.

    Things in the Valley have not been this bad in two decades. I don’t measure this by violence, terrorism, and fatalities – we have seen much worse years on that count. I say this because battling Pakistan’s armed proxies is much more straightforward than taking on your own people on the street. And cloaking militancy with a protective sheet of civilian agitations, women, and teenagers among them, means many of the old conflict zone formulas won’t work.

    Pakistan’s presence as instigator is at once more visible and more covert. Travel through villages of south Kashmir and you will see many more Pakistani flags than ever before. Quiz Kashmiris about why and some will laugh and say, “It’s just to irritate you people; it’s the one thing that always works.” But, if earlier Pakistan’s role was easier to track, through infiltration, exfiltration and training camps across the border – now it is insidious, engineered through sophisticated social media videos and hawala transactions. Terrorism has not stopped targeting security personnel but propaganda has become a more critical weapon than earlier.

    Unlike the hashtag nationalism of venom-spewing anchors, the Army definitely wants political outreach. Soldiers do not want to be used as a substitute for either politicians or policemen. In fact, the Army is not in favor of being deployed in situations that pit it against the locals. In the past several high ranking officers have refused to be drawn into managing violent street protests. Lt General DS Hooda, the erudite and never-frazzled officer who oversaw the surgical strikes across the Line of Control told me that it was a ‘missed opportunity’ to not build on the strikes with a simultaneous domestic effort in the Valley. He points out that in addition to putting pressure on Pakistan it was as important to “address the internal situation in Kashmir which had started calming down by this time.”

    Elections in the state have been absolutely free and fair since 2002 but while poll participation signals an institutional improvement it does not mitigate the separatist sentiment. The fatal flaw in conflating voter-turnout with ‘normalcy’ has returned to haunt us with the dismal showing in the Srinagar by polls. We are trapped by the obvious corollary; if high voter numbers mean a rejection of secessionism what does the lowest voting statistic in 30 years (down to 2% in some parts of Srinagar, under 7% overall) tell us about how Kashmiris feel?

    Yes, the Hurriyat gets money and other support from Pakistan to instigate trouble in the state. But several of its members have also been courted on the back-channel by our intelligence agencies for years, obviously with different intents than Islamabad. Former R&AW chief AS Dulat outed the worst-kept secret when he revealed that not just separatists, but even militants had been engaged by Indian sleuths, both politically and financially. “So what’s wrong; it’s done the world over,” Dulat told me. “Corrupting someone with money is more ethical and smarter than killing him.”

    Every separatist or militant who has attempted dialogue with New Delhi has been assassinated by Pakistan. The Vajpayee government succeeded in bringing a faction of the Hizbul Mujahideen, led by Abdul Majid Dar, to the table for talks. He was killed soon after. As was Hurriyat representative, Abdul Gani Lone, whose son Sajad is a minister in the present government. A mechanism that provides security and relevance to men willing to give up the gun has not yet taken root in Kashmir even 28 years after the insurgency began.

    The problem remains political but radicalisation and a growing Islamism is real. I met a teenage boy strapped to a hospital bed who marched for slain militant Burhan Wani because he “protects Islam.” The Internet has made many angry young Kashmiris part of a global ‘ummah,’ exposing them to more fundamental strains of Islam. Both Wani and his successor Zakir Bhat released videos calling for a Caliphate. One officer argues, “Earlier Islam was a subset of Azadi; now Azadi is a subset of Islam.”

    If New Delhi does not start a dialogue process soon, there will be no one to talk to. Separatists have only pocket boroughs of influence and they are fast losing control of the street.

    Barkha Dutt is an award-winning journalist and author

    The views expressed are personal

    Courtesy: Hindustan Times

    https://www.kashmir.watch/no-talks-people-not-loyal-india-ram-madhav/

  • Noted gynaecologist Of kashmir Dr. Tahira Khanam passes away

    Srinagar: Noted gynaecologist of the Valley Dr.Tahira Khanam passed away on Wednesday morning at 10.10 A.M.

    She was laid to rest after Dhur prayers. Her chahrum will be held on Saturday (20.05.2017) at 9.30 A.M in the family graveyard in Magarmal.

  • Students suffer in Kupwara school as teacher is absent from last 10 months

    Kupwara: A single teacher is teaching around 45 students in a government primary school in a Kupwara village as another teacher appointed through Prime Minister’s Special Package for Kashmiri migrants has not attended to her duties from the last 10 months, despite drawing regular monthly salary.
    The Primary School Khabanrad Zangli area in Kupwara has on its rolls more than 45 students and two teachers have been posted in it. Hussaina Akhtar posted as teacher under SSA and Goldy Dhar appointed few years ago as a teacher in the department under PMSP for Kashmiri pandits, are the only two teachers in the school. However, the officials and the teacher said that Dhar has been absent from her duties after she joined last year.
    “The non-availability of teachers is jeopardising our career. A single teacher cannot teach us well,” a group of students told KNS.
    The parents said that due to shortage of teaching staff in the school, their children have suffered. “It is unfortunate the education department is not providing adequate staff to our children,” the aggrieved parents told KNS.
    Officials said that Dhar has been appointed in 2016 as a teacher in the department and is posted at Primary School Khabanrad Zangli
    “But she is absent from her duty from that day when she was appointed. Her salary account has been credited by time to time, as per official records,” the officials said.
    While talking to the Headmistress of the SSA primary school Hussaina told Kashmir News Service (KNS), that Dhar’s absence is a loss to the students.
    “Goldy Dhar is an efficient teacher and would teach English and Mathematics in the school. She is a good motivational teacher but her absence is a big loss for the students,” she said.
    “How can I teach all the subjects to more than 45 students studying here. I have also informed about the absence of the teacher to higher authorities,” she said.
    Zonal Education Officer (ZEO) Kupwara, Fareed Ahmad Khan, told KNS that they have sent a notice to Dhar about her absence.
    “We have told her to come and resume her duty. But she hasn’t responded yet. We have informed higher authorities about the matter and to look into it because students are also facing problems and teaching also suffers due to her absence,” Khan told KNS.
    The officials said that they have been ordered by higher authorities “not stop salary of any teacher appointed under the PM’s package.
    CEO Kupwara Farooq Ahmad was not available for the comments. (KNS)

  • ‘We need to own and love Srinagar to make it more beautiful than Switzerland’

    After he took over as Srinagar Municipal Corporation commissioner, Dr Shafqat Khan is being seen as a hope by the citizens for face-lifting and improving the Summer capital.

    Khan says that the people in Srinagar need to own and love the city to make it more beautiful than Switzerland and Venice. The new commissioner says that he has road map to make Srinagar the capital city of Jammu and Kashmir in a real sense of the word and to improve the work culture and bring accountability within the municipal body.

    Srinagar city which is faced by myriad of civic issues like sewage waste disposal and treatment, encroachment of land and water bodies by residents, footpathsby vendors, cleanliness,perpetual traffic mismanagement and does not need temporary measures.

    Khan says that the city needs a sustainable development plan for long-term to make it one of the best cities in the world.

    “Health, hygiene and happiness is our vision statement,” Dr Khan says.

    Waste management

    “Waste management is being thought about in a holistic way. Drainage, lighting, housing and mobility and other issues have taken a chronic shape and need to be addressed.”

    Reformation of SMC

    “We need to reform the SMC within at administrative level, improve accountability. SMC needs a major facelift of SMC as it has faced many difficulties in the past,”

    Drainage

    “Srinagar city has 182000 households. There are complaints of lack of drainage, lighting from every colony. Colonies have been set up as clusters without planning. Only 40 % drainage is available for the whole city, which is almost defunct after floods in 2014. Not only do we face solid waste management, liquid waste disposal is also a challenge. Under Smart City urban planning, Srinagar will be reformed in a planned way in phase wise methods. We will not resort to window dressing, but will address the rootcause of the issues.”

    “We have started door to door collection of solid waste in the city. Nowwaste will be collected at the households and straightway taken to dumping sites.”

    Footpaths and vendors

    “Footpaths have been encroached by vendors. Vendors will be rehabilitated and shifted in identified zones. The signage in the city will be improved for easy location of colonies and addresses.”

    Encroachment

    “Not only land, but water bodies like Chouth Kull, Gilsar, Anchar, Khushalsar lakes have been encroached and converted into garbage dumps. Government is planning to remove encroachments to make water bodies clean and hygienic.”

    “People will not be allowed to encroach roads and land within the city. We will issue building permissions in shortest possible time.”

    Love for the city

    “People need to own the city, love and feel it. If we don’t remain sensitive about the city, for future generation, the city will not be worth living.”

    Kns/Kashmir Magazine/Kashmir Today

  • Anantnag boy launches social networking site

    Srinagar: A 16-year-old boy has come up with a ‘social networking site’ called KashBook after the state government imposed a ban on social media in Kashmir Valley.
    Zeyan Shafiq, a resident of Anantnag, developed and launched the social networking platform within a week after the government banned 22 social media services including Facebook, WhatsApp and Twitter.
    The young software enthusiast completed his class 10 exams recently. Along with his friend, Uzair Jan, 19, Zeyan came up with KashBook.
    The app was first launched in 2013 but was re-launched by Zeyan after the ban. Zeyan has said that within days of re-launch of the app, the site has more than 1,000 users who are satisfied with its features.
    “The government has blocked access to all the social networks and they are blocking VPNs too. If they block complete access to social media, how will people from Kashmir stay connected? KashBook is the answer to social media gag,” Zeyan said.
    Zeyan and Uzair Jan developed a mobile optimised website and mobile apps for Google Play store and App Store. The duo aims to pursue computer engineering in the future.
    Many people here have defied the ban and are accessing the blocked websites by using a virtual private network. But these teens claim that their app does not require a VPN.
    The duo claimed that through the app, they will focus and promote goods and services made in Kashmir. “Our effort inspires others to invent and develop new things which can serve as tools for the betterment of Kashmir in a positive way,” said Zeyan.
    He said he started learning HTML tags by himself at the age of 11. He also tried his hand on computer languages such as C++ and Java. “On the portal, you can add people and chat with them, post messages along with many features which one finds in other social media websites. There is also a market for buying and selling,” he added.

  • Social media ban likely to continue in Kashmir

    No improvement in ground situation, state counsel tells HC

    Srinagar: The state government today indicated that it may continue with the social media ban in the Kashmir valley as the ground situation has still not improved.While seeking more time before the government actually reviews the order, the state counsel today submitted before the High Court that there was no improvement in the situation in the Valley and it was actually going from bad to worse.Observing that the social media ban cannot be a “permanent fixture”, the High Court today directed the state government to review the “impugned” order and file a reply by May 24, the next date of hearing.Citing maintenance of public order, the government on April 26 ordered a one-month ban on 22 social media sites, mobile phone messengers and video-uploading sites in the Valley by invoking the provision of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885.However, the ban order was challenged by two petitioners before the High Court, which on May 8 issued notices to the respondents with directions to the J&K Government to file objections by May 16.As the matter came up before the court today, Additional Advocate General Bashir Ahmad Dar, representing J&K Government, sought time to file objections.However, at this point, Justice Sudhakar Ramalingam observed that “the ban cannot be a permanent fixture”, saying that there must be “periodical reviews” after assessing the situation.“In the interest of justice, the respondents are given one more opportunity to file a reply by May 24,” Justice Sudhakar observed in his orders.Meanwhile, Dar further submitted that a lot of lives had been lost due to the misuse of social media, adding that it was for the same reason that state was regulating social media in Kashmir. (TNS)

  • Kashmir father appeals for Rs 22 lakh to help young kid battle cancer

    Srinagar: A young father-of-two from central Kashmir’s Budgam district has appealed for help to raise Rs 22 lakh to save the life of his son who suffers from leukemia.

    Mohammad Ashiq’s appeal comes just three months ahead of his son Syed Abuzar’s fifth birthday. 

    Ashiq, a resident of remote Surasyar village, says he has sold whatever he could lay his hands on to fund the treatment of his son from past four years when he was diagnosed with “isolated CNS relapsed pre B ALL” – a type of cancer.

    After initial treatment at SKIMS Soura, Ashiq travelled to Delhi and Mumbai to find the best treatment available for his ailing son.

    Doctors, he says, have advised stem cell transplant with a note that it “needs to be done as soon as possible”.

    “He needs to be started on re-induction chemotherapy and provided that he has a good response with CNS being negative and marrow also negative by MRD, will need a stem cell transplant to consolidate his therapy and this needs to be done as soon as possible,” reads a note by Dr Santanu Sen at Kokilaben Dhirubai Ambani hospital and medical Research Institute. 

    “The total cost of BMT (Bone Marrow Transplant) will be in the range of 18-20 lakhs, approximately. The cost of Re-induction therapy will be approximately 1.5 to 2 lakhs,” it adds.

    Abuzar is currently battling through a course of chemotherapy at SKIMS Soura.

    If you want to help fund his treatment, please call on this number +91 700 62 99877 or alternately transfer money into the bank account given below.

    Account No: 0008040100030300

    Syed Ashique Elahi

    Jammu and Kashmir Bank

    Branch: Chadoora

    IFSC code: JAKA0CHADOO

  • Zakir Musa’s statement unacceptable: Hizbul Mujahideen

    Hizb dissociates itself from Zakir Moosa statement, calls it Zakir’s “personal opinion”.

    Srinagar, May 13 : Reacting to the purported audio statement of its militant Zakir Musa in which he had threatened Hurriyat leaders, Hizbul Mujahideen Saturday said that the outfit has does not subscribe to the statement.

    In an emailed statement to KNS, HM spokesman Saleem Hashmi said that the “militant organisation does not subscribe to the statement.”

    “Such a statement is unacceptable to us. It reflects the personal opinion of Zakir Musa. Post Burhan Wani’s martyrdom, the nation and the leadership are united at every front and taking ahead the struggle for freedom and Islam to its end,” Hashmi said in the statement.

    “At this juncture, any such statement or step will strengthen the occupying and imperialistic forces. Hizbul Mujahidin, the guardian of lakhs of sacrifices and freedom, is assessing the statement and won’t hesitate to take steps for the betterment of the freedom movement. We appeal the pro-freedom youth not give much attention and discourage such statements coming out in the media,” the spokesman said. (KNS)

  • Valley doctor turns writer to help cancer patients

    Srinagar: Dr Saba Shafi had started writing articles for local newspapers and magazines from an early age but the thought of writing a book never crossed her mind till around a year back. As she would regularly pen down her thoughts in a ‘stream-of-consciousness’ style of literary writing, her family members suggested her to turn her prose and poetry into a book.Though a practising doctor with an MD in pathology, Saba then finished her book titled ‘Leaves from Kashmir’, which was recently published by the ‘Partridge’. The book tells the story of a young woman’s journey from her native land of Kashmir to Delhi. And the proceeds from the sales of the book are going to benefit mental health and cancer patients of the Valley.“I would write for magazines and local papers but I decided to write a book only after my husband and aunt suggested it. I got married around a year back. My in-laws would love what I write and said let’s put it in a book. The book has now been published and the proceeds from the sale will go to charity for mental health and cancer patients,” said Saba, who belongs to the Rajbagh area of the summer capital and is now working in New Delhi.A student of the well-known Presentation Convent School, she was the topper in her Class X and XII board exams. She completed her MBBS from Government Medical College, Srinagar, and MD in pathology from the Sher-I-Kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences, Soura.Through the ‘Leaves from Kashmir’, Saba also hopes that the book would encourage the Valley youth to give vent to their artistic expressions.“The protagonist is a young woman, who mulls over the aspects of her life and the conflicts in her personality. I also hope that the book encourages youth to come out of the woodwork as they do not have many platforms to vent out their artistic expressions in Kashmir,” she said.

  • Young Kashmiri Army officer shot while home on leave

    Srinagar: A Lieutenant-rank Army officer, who was posted at a RAJRIF unit in Akhnoor, was on Wednesday found killed in Shopian district of South Kashmir late last night.

    Lt Umar Fayaz hailed from neighbouring Kulgam district. He was on a leave and had gone to Shopian to attend a marriage function of a relative.Fayaz was allegedly abducted and shot by Militants last night. Two bullet marks were found on his body.The officer, who was young and full of life, was commissioned in December 2016.