Kashmiri Shi’ite Muslims participate in a religious procession on the seventh of Muharram in Srinagar on Saturday.
Kashmiri Shi’ite Muslims participate in a religious procession on the seventh of Muharram in Srinagar on Saturday.
Muharram processions remain banned in Srinagar since 1990. If, as the government argues, the situation has improved considerably, surely the people have a case for revocation of the ban?
SYED ZAFAR MEHDI
We are in Muharram, the month of bereavement and remembrance. In 680 AD, around 1500 years ago, Husain (as)—the beloved grandson of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)—was martyred along with his family and friends in the desert plains of Karbala in Iraq by the armies of tyrant ruler Yazeed. Every year, around this time, massive processions are taken out across the world to pay rich tributes to the 72 martyrs of Karbala.
Reciting soul-stirring elegies and hymns, participants wear black dresses and badges, beating their chests in a spirit of devotion. They carry replicas of Husain’s mausoleum in Karbala, and parade the streets. Big banners and hoardings are put up on every street, alley and pathway, mainly in areas where Muslims live. However, in some countries, its appeal cuts across the religious and ideological divide, because Husain’s uprising in Karbala was not a religious tussle, a political war or a petty struggle for power. It was a confrontation between right and might, between the forces of truth and falsehood. In many countries, the Muharram commemorations have been effectively used as a psychological weapon and mechanism to mobilize masses against evil, injustice and repression.
Essence of Muharram
Muharram, contrary to the popular perception, is not merely an event or episode in history, revolving around a grief-centric ritual. It is a philosophy, a concept, and a movement, that will always have contemporary significance, in every time and age. The threat of injustice and tyranny will always have contemporary significance. Muslims of the world commonly observe and commemorate Husain’s sacrifice each year, remembering his redemptive suffering for the greater good of humankind. Even 1500 years on, these annual commemorations have not lost their significance, but on the contrary have become even more powerful and potent. Mahmoud Ayoub writes in his book Redemptive Suffering in Islam: A Study of the Devotional Aspects of Ashura in Twelver Shi’ism, ‘in the ritualistic moment, serial time becomes the bridge connecting primordial time and its special history with the timeless eternity of the future. The eternal fulfillment of time becomes the goal of human time and history.”
These annual commemorations help the campaigners of justice and truth re-organise their life around the principles exemplified by Husain, in Karbala. It strengthens their ability and resolve to rise up against autocracy, despotism and treachery. Husain’s uprising and sacrifice promote the enjoining of good. It teaches that notwithstanding the exiguousness of power and numbers, if your stand is right, victory will always be yours. Urdu poet Mohammad Ali Jauhar aptly encapsulates it in these words:
Qatl e Husain asl mein marg Yazeed hai,
Islam zinda hota hai har Karbala ke baad
(The murder of Husain is actually the end of [his killer] Yazeed,
Islam is refreshed by the blood of the martyrs of Karbala)
Muharram Processions Across the World
In the next few days, till the tenth of Muharram, which this year falls on November 25, these processions would be carried out in all parts of the world. Biggest processions are taken out in Tehran, Karbala, London, Sydney, New York, Moscow, Toronto, Karachi, Dhaka, Lucknow etc. In U.S., the biggest procession starts from Park Avenue and culminates in front of the Pakistani Consulate. In Toronto, the procession leaves from Queen’s Park and ends at High Court entrance. In London, thousands of mourners assemble in Central London Marble Arch Hyde Park and take part in the procession. In Iran, millions participate in Muharram processions in all major cities like Tehran, Masshad and Isfahan. In Trinidad and Tobago, it is popular as ‘Hosay’ and not even Sunnis and Hindus participate in these processions, but also Afro-Trinidadians. In eastern Saudi Arabian city Qatif, Muharram means lot of activity and palpable buzz. In Nigeria, large processions are taken out in Katsina state in northern Nigeria. In Pakistan, major processions are taken out in Karachi. In India, major processions are carried out in Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Lucknow, and Kargil. “These processions are held across the world to send out a clear message that injustice and tyranny ultimately vanishes and truth and justice prevails,” says Syed Raza, a Kashmiri poet, whose soul-stirring nauhas (elegies) are recited in Muharram processions in Kashmir.
The Ban in Kashmir
In Kashmir, the story is different and grim, and remains unchanged for the last two decades. The government’s ban on Muharram processions (Muharram 8 and 10) in Srinagar city is in place since 1990, when the armed rebellion against India gained momentum. Despite the clampdown and curfew-like restrictions imposed by authorities, thousands of young devotees carry out processions and are subjected to brutal police action. They are thrashed, manhandled, cane charged, and some are even sent to custody. Some of the senior Shia leaders are put under house arrest to prevent them from leading these processions.
Religious processions were being taken out in Kashmir since 1527 when Sultan Muhammad Shah was the ruler. Shia Muslims (minority), with help and cooperation of Sunni Muslims (majority), used to take out two major processions, one from Namchbal to Imambara Zadibal and other one from Alamgiri Bazar to Khushalsar. In 1977, at the request of the then Chief Minister Shiekh Muhammad Abdullah, it was decided to take out a joint procession from Abi Guzar to Zadibal. “However,” says Hakeem Imtiyaz Husain, “in 1989, the then governor of J&K imposed a ban on the procession, as part of the sweeping measures to deal with the political unrest. Notwithstanding the repeated pleas by the people of Kashmir, the ban still stands.” Hakeem, retired jurist and writer, is presently working on a book that chronicles the history of Shias in Kashmir.
Legal battle
On Jan 17, 2008, J&K High Court had issued a notice to the state government seeking its objections on a petition filed by Ittihadul Muslimeen, a religio-political outfit representing Shia Muslims of state. But government failed to communicate the ban order to them. The petition sought to quash the ban, calling it a flagrant violation of international law and denial of religious rights. On December 5, 2009, High Court again issued notice to the state government directing it to file objections, but to no avail. “The government informed the court that processionists must seek prior permission from authorities, which we did, but the ban was still not lifted. After four years of legal battle, we finally realized that the whole exercise was futile, because they were never interested in listening to our pleas,” Masroor Abbas Ansari, President, Ittihadul Muslimeen, who had filed the petition, says.
People in Kashmir demand revocation of ban on the grounds that violence has abated and situation has improved considerably. “The ban on Muharram processions, as with the ban on the July 13th procession commemorating the Martyrs of 1931, is simply undemocratic and a denial of the basic rights of Kashmiri people,” says Mirza Waheed, author of critically acclaimed novel The Collaborator, which is set in Kashmir. Waheed says the ban on Muharram processions cannot be viewed in isolation. “You have to see it in the context of the larger structure of repression in Kashmir.”
“There is not much we can do other than protest against it. We fought a legal battle and got a green signal from court but government remains unfazed. Every year, in Muharram, our volunteers hold peaceful protests. I have raised the issue in meetings with Indian government authorities and even at OIC,” says Aga Syed Hasan, separatist leader and President of J&K Anjuman e Shariee Shiaan, a constituent of Hurriyat conference.
Muharram and Amarnath Yatra
“While the state provides all support for the annual Amarnath Yatra, which it should—and Kashmiris have always supported and welcomed the Yatra—it has consistently curbed the right to assemble of the local population,” says Waheed.
Khurram Parvez, Programme Coordinator, Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society, questions the secular credentials of a state that does not allow people the freedom to practice their religion and participate in religious activities: “On one hand, state patronises, organises, partially sponsors Yatra for Hindus of India and on the other hand, it curbs and criminalises the religious programmes of Muslims like Muharram processions, Milad processions etc. Yet the government has the audacity to call itself secular.”
Zafar Meraj, veteran journalist and chief editor of Kashmir Monitor calls it ‘blatant discrimination’: “Government claims the ban is owing to security reasons but what about similar processions taken out in various parts of Kashmir and some old-city localities? If it can provide security to annual Amarnath yatra that attracts lakhs of Hindu pilgrims every year, why not Muharram processions that have never been under any kind of threat?”
“The contrast cannot get any starker,” says Waheed. “The state wants to develop infrastructure to facilitate and possibly expand the Amarnath Yatra — at potentially disastrous cost to the environment — and at the same time, it has for nearly 20 years now, not allowed people to take out the historic processions of Muharram and July 13.”
Brutal police action
Each year, police imposes curfew-like restrictions on Muharram 8 and 10 (which fall on November 23 and 25 this year) in parts of Srinagar city, including Lal Chowk, the nerve centre of the summer capital. Iron barricades and spools of concertina wires are put up at almost every entry point to city centre. The cops do not even allow pedestrian movement in Lal chowk, and tough restrictions are enforced in Rajouri Kadal, Gojwara, Nowhatta and some adjoining areas in old city. Senior leaders are put under house arrest to prevent them from leading the processions.
However, despite the clampdown, thousands of mourners defy the police restrictions on Muharram 8 and 10 every year — as they indeed did today —and take out peaceful mourning processions in the main city. Each time, they are intercepted by massive contingents of fully-armed police and paramilitary personnel. The cops lob tear smoke shells, resort to baton charge and brutally manhandle the mourners who participate in these processions. “It is our right and duty to protest against the draconian ban in peaceful manner, but that does not mean it will become a law and order problem, so brute police action is unwarranted,” says Hasan, who yields considerable clout in Kashmir’s Shia community.
“It is not merely hypocritical but perverse, given that the state itself, appropriating July 13, 1931, a historic moment of resistance against the tyranny of Dogra rule, commemorates the day with official pomp while keeping the people of Kashmir under virtual siege each year,” says Waheed. “When the state bans Muharram, July 13th, Geelani’s public appearances, while making sure Amarnath Yatra gets bigger; it speaks in a language of conquest. And the message is not lost on the people of Kashmir. They see it as an imperial dictat.”
Mohammad Junaid, doctoral student in Anthropology at City University of New York says the government bans Muharram processions because of ‘old colonialist aspersions’ that such moments of solemn mourning would turn into occasions of political critique and subversion. “Remember that Muharram is observed in memory of those who spoke back to power and refused to submit. Muharram processions illuminate the utter incommensurability of power and truth, and this is precisely what those governments whose foundations are based on deception and manipulation absolutely fear,” says Junaid. His research focuses on issues of space, violence and militarisation in Kashmir.
Anti-India sentiments?
The official version that these processions stoke anti-national sentiments and pose security threat finds few takers. “It is hogwash, far from reality. It only suggests that the tall claims of government about normalcy and peace are false,” says Aga Syed Hadi, Vice-Chairman, Aaytullah Yousuf Memorial Trust, which runs hundreds of schools across Kashmir imparting Islamic education. “You see, it must be examined in the context of the state’s repression of all sentiment that it sees as anti-national,” says Waheed.
Hasan finds the argument frivolous. “Muharram teaches us to be tolerant and steadfast in the face of adversities, and it also teaches us to rise against injustice. Government cannot deny us our right to organise religious activities on such hollow and baseless pretexts.”
It is a sinister attempt to keep Muslims divided in this part of world, feels Meraj. “The ban on main Muharram procession that used to be taken from Abi Guzar in uptown, and was joined by Shias and Sunnis in large numbers speaks volumes about the gross discrimination that has been going on in Kashmir for last over decades, and is an attempt to divide the community.”
‘Official’ version
Aga Syed Mehmood, former minister and senior leader of PDP, the main opposition party in the state, says government had to ban these processions in 1990 because of the gravity of the situation. “In 1989, when I was part of government, it had decided to put curbs on these processions but we resisted the decision. As the regime fell in 1990 and the governor took over to deal with the political turmoil, the ban was announced.” However, he hastens to add that the brutalities unleashed on the peaceful processions every year are uncalled for. “Chief Minister Omar Abdullah calls for the removal of AFSPA in Srinagar, then what is the problem with a procession that is completely of religious nature?” asks Mehmood.
Tanvir Sadiq, spokesman of the ruling National Conference says the restarting of the procession like the 8th is under the active consideration of the government. “Kashmir is limping back to normalcy, and I am confident and reasonably sure that soon the processions on 8 and 10 Muharram will resume,” says Sadiq. However, he refuses to admit that mourners are subjected to brutal police action and calls it a ‘precautionary measure’. “There is no brutal police action. The government has asked the police to ensure that religious processions or mourners are not harassed, but having said that, there are times when the police in order to maintain law and order may have to take some precautionary measures.”
Tailpiece:
The unyielding stand taken by Husain in Karbala carries an eloquent message that has gripped the hearts and minds of countless generations throughout history. It gives a sense of hope and optimism to those who believe in the righteousness of their cause. Muharram and Karbala are symbolic, cutting across the barriers of space and time. Today Karbala is Gaza, Karbala is Kashmir, Karbala is Iraq, Karbala is Afghanistan.
“Every revolution has two visages: blood and the message,” says Ali Shariati, the late Iranian sociologist and revolutionary. “Husain and his companions undertook the first mission, that of blood. The second mission is to bear the message to the whole world, to be the eloquent tongue of this flowing blood and these resting bodies among the walking dead.”
In Kashmir and elsewhere, as people pour out on streets every year in Muharram to remember the martyrs of Karbala, they do not intend to create a law and order problem. They are only carrying forward the second mission: bearing the message of blood to the world, lest it remains mute in the history and those who need this message are deprived of it.
Syed Zafar Mehdi is a New Delhi-based journalist, born and brought up in Kashmir
The Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) Chairman, Muhammad Yasin Malik, urged GoI to compensate flood victims. The JKLF chairman said the mag- nitude of devastation and the scale of losses were so high that without help and assistance from the international community it was impossible to com- pensate the losses. “The international community can- not remain a silent spectator in this situation, and India should also not politicize the human tragedy by refus- ing international aid and assistance.
Taking a strong exception to the dis- mal performance exhibited by BSNL, particularly during the devastating floods, chief minister Omar Abdullah observed that BSNL has maligned the image and prestige of central govern- ment in the state. Taking a dig at snail’s pace mea- sures taken by BSNL in restoration of the lost connectivity, Omar in brief chat with The Kashmir Magazine said that had the state government under- gone the restoration measures like that of the BSNL, the state would have been still submerged under the water.
“This is the only major central office representing the central government in state and its dismal performance during the floods has put a question mark on its mandate,” he said. The chief minister claimed further that his own official BSNL number might be still out of order, making him to ask for phone from his subordinates to make a phone call. “Even in secretariat the phones are not working. I have to either remain present in civil secretariat or at Hari Niwas so that to remain connected.”
Pertinently, when the devastating floods created havoc and the mobile telecommunications was the most needed service to inquire about the whereabouts of near and dear ones, most of the operators especially the state owned BSNL remained com- pletely out of gear, adding to the miseries of helpless people. Even near a month has passed since theses floods ravaged the state, BSNL is still per- forming at a snail’s pace with its landline, broadband and cell phone networks remaining abysmally dis- turbed.
Q: When almost every political party here is stressing for the state elections on due date, what is your take on this?
Elections in the state should be conducted on due date as the massive measures for the rehabilitation and rebuilding of the flood torn areas of the state will be taken in the month of March- April next year by the next dispensation. It is important to con- duct elections in the month of Janu- ary so that the next government could speed up the measures of rehabilita-tion after the winter months are over.
However, at present concentration must be on the relief and rehabilita- tion activities and that all the govern- ment machinery must prioritize the efforts for the same. I believe that we should concentrate on relief activities and we have much time later to think about polls. Also the governor’s rule, if imposed, would hamper the relief activities, therefore, elections must be conducted during the tenure of the present government.
Q: How do view the role played by local youth during the recent floods?
80 percent of the population hit by floods was rescued by the local youth who endangered their lives to save others. We all must salute the cour- age of youth who risked their lives, made temporary boats and went into the flood waters to save people in thousands. As the NDRF also did a remarkable job but the courage dis- played by the youth is laudable.
Q: What is your view over the relief and rehabilitation measures being taken by GOI?
The interest displayed by the Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the initial period is contrary to the ground situation at present. The leaders came here, made announcements and then went into the deep slumber. No where could we see the serious approach of GOI in relief operations as I believe the political motives are be- hind this relief work.
Q: And please tell us your opinion about the measures taken up by the state government?
The officers at the helm in the midst of the crises were worried about their dear ones and not about the lakhs of common people who were hit by the catastrophic floods. Honestly, I was much disheartened to observe that at the time when the state machinery had to care of all, the officers were worried about their own family men, friends and relatives. Also another unfortunate aspect is that the govern-ment servants are waiting for the orders to work. They used listen to the call of their conscience and work in unison to get state out of this havoc. Also people here should keep vigil over such elements that are hell bent upon exploiting the present catastrophic situation in the state.
There are various elements present in our society that always are waiting for such catastrophic situation to emerge so that same could be exploited. People of state must keep an eye upon such people and parties who are fish- ing in the troubled waters at present. The money that is coming for the re- lief and rehabilitation must be spent in a proper and just way. Both rul- ing and opposition parties must prioritize the efforts so that funds could reach the affected homes.
Various political parties are trying to politicize the present situation in the state and are trying to seek political benefits out. One party thinks that if relief works are failed to be carried, it would affect the ruling party and will benefit the opposite ones. We have to change this attitude if we have to rebuild the state of Jammu and Kashmir.
Q: There are allegations that NDRF and other teams adopted pick and choose during rescue operations in various areas. What is your take?
The army and NDRF performed remarkable job while carrying out the rescue operations. The fact is that the rescue teams reached to the areas that were accessible for their large boats and heavy choppers. People should not feel that they adopted any pick and choose approach.
PHE, Irrigation and Flood Control minister while recollecting the measures taken by the state establishment during September’s catastrophic floods nullified the reports that breach of traditional Kandzal embankment would have saved the summer capital during the catastrophic floods Sham Lal Sharma while talking to KNS took strong exception to the re- ports that inordinate delay by the state government to breach traditional Kan- dzal embankment of river Jhelum led to submergence of the Srinagar city during recent floods. He remarked that gauge at Sangam was already un- der the flood waters and that it was for the first time witnessed in the history of the region that Jehlum breached through both the sides “Kandizal would not have helped at that time as the water was flowing in most un- expected quantity and the place itself was under the 25ft of flood waters.
We have the capacity of 40 thousand cusecs and we got around three lakh and twenty thousand cusecs of water. How Kandizal could had helped us, it wasn’t a mere flood it was a disaster” In a brief chat with Kashmir News Service (KNS), Sham Lal Sharma stated that water on September 3 had crossed the danger level in Jehlum at three different places and that at zero Bridge of the summer capital- the situ- ation was already alarming. “Between the night of 3-4 September at 11.30, I received a call from Chief Engineer Irrigation- informing me that the situ- ation is turning turbulent near Zero Bridge. I asked him to inform DC, SSP and Div Com so that alert to the peo- ple living in adjoining areas could be sounded. I reached the spot at 12 in the night. The waters were flowing with a dreadful speed.” Sharma recalled. He added that the low lying areas of Sri nagar city including Jawaharnagar, Raj Bagh, Lasjan and other areas were warned to move out of their houses.
Sharma said that he was personally telephoned by some bureaucrats of the state establishment urging him not to panic the locals as floods would never occur in the city. “I told them that the situation is indeed alarming as the waters have crossed the danger mark in the river.” The minister added that CM arrived near zero bridge at 7.30 in the morn- ing and along with the senior officers of the state administration, a meeting at Police Control Room (PCR) Srinagar was convened at 9 in the morn- ing. “After the meeting, myself and the chief minister went to take the outer view of the city.
There are already water of 3ft present in Barzulla area and Panthachowk was turning inundated as the rains didn’t stop. I told the chief minister that it seems that the rains would not stop and speedy measures need to be taken on priority.” Sharma maintained further that on September 5, the situation turned alarming in the Jammu region of the state as the flash floods created hav- oc in various areas “ We travelled to Jammu and took stock of the situation there.”
However, the minister remarked that Wullar saved north Kashmir and the intake capacity of the lake increased due to the recent dredging. He added that the area of the lake is 190 sq Kms and high quantity of wa- ter was drifted towards the lake which saved the north Kashmir region of the state. “Had it not been wullar, north Kashmir would have been drowned.”
National Conference General Secretary Ali Mohammad Sagar in an exclusive interview to The Kashmir Magazine elaborated in detail the reasons for NC’s defeat in Parliament polls and strategy the party is adopting to face the tough times ahead.
Excerpts from the Interview
Q: What about the preparations of National Conference vis-à-vis the upcoming assembly elections?
A: NC is very much prepared for the battle and we have kept our cadre ready to accept the challenge. The most important thing for the National Conference is to remain connected to its cadre as the party cadre is the only strength and courage for NC. We are holding the meeting at Mohala, Block levels and are listening to the suggestions being put forth by the party activists and workers.
Q: NC lost all the seats of valley during the recently held Lok Sabha polls. What were the reasons for this terrible rout?
A: There are several reasons for our defeat and not just the one. I can say that several reasons caused our defeat. I can only say that the party network needs to be strengthened at grass root levels. Earlier there used to be the strong bond between the party and its workers. That connection was somehow lost due to which we suffered. Now we are striving to address that issue and we are working on it.
Q: Don’t you think that cross voting was another major reason for NC’s defeat during parliamentary elections?
A: Yes, that really surprised us all. We were hoping that Congress votes would get transferred in our favor but that didn’t happen, neither in South Kashmir and nor in North Kashmir. But we can say that other factors also acted as the spoilsport. There were issues with the electricity and people were disgruntled with the dues. There were the reports of the scarcity of ration and some internal issues within the National Conference. Also during the parliament poll campaign, we made it Modi vs Rahul issue rather than projecting our own achievements and now we know what the outcome was.
Q: How much was the party affected due to the presence of Dr Farooq Abdullah at New Delhi during the past five years?
A: Yes, he is a teacher and a guide for the party leaders and workers. He kept on guiding us on various subtle issues. Now due to his health conditions he could not spend much time with the party affairs. But now Omar Sahib is boosting the morale of the party and his hard work is yielding results.
Q: How do you view your fight against the PDP that has swept all the three seats of valley during parliament polls held recently?
A: Against PDP we don’t have any fight. I mean you cannot compare a movement with few people who are the creation of agencies to foil NC’s pro-Kashmir agenda. Agencies choose Mufti Mohammad Sayeed as he has served as the Indian Home Minister and the agencies believe him as pro-Indian. He was given the task to damage the NC agenda and after we passed the autonomy resolution in assembly, PDP was brought into limelight. NC is the party of people and we have been struggling for Kashmir since 1931.
Q: It is being accused at present that NC lost its ideology and undermined the principles for which party’s foundation was laid by Shiekh Mohammad Abdullah?
A: No, not at all. We are treading the path of Sher-e-Kashmir. Situations change and we had to change with the time. There are various forces that are hell-bent upon damaging the party but despite the repeated attempts they could not shake a single stone of this strong building.
Q: NC advocates for Autonomy as the solution for Kashmir issue but is ready to accept any solution better than autonomy. If it is plebiscite or Rai Shumari, will you accept?
A: Yes¸ we will accept Rai Shumari as the solution of Kashmir. Why not? How can we reject it? If people of Kashmir demand and accept this as the solution for the long pending Kashmir issue, we have no objection in accepting it as the Peoples’ verdict.
Researchers say Kashmir region is more vulnerable to long spells of high intensity rains because of global climate change and the geography of the region which can increase the frequency of floods in future.
BY JEHANGIR ALI
SRINAGAR — The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has warned that the intensity of rainfall and the frequency of rainy days in the Himalayan region may increase in 2030’s, which can lead to another flood in Kashmir if immediate steps are not taken to restore the drainage system of Jehlum.
A rapid assessment carried out by ISRO’s National Remote Sensing Centre and Kashmir’s Environment and Remote Sensing Department after the September floods wreaked havoc across the region says the frequency of rainy days is likely to decrease in most parts of the country in 2030s.
“The intensity of rainy days will increase in a more warming scenario. The number of rainy days in the Himalayan region may increase by 5-10 days on an average in the 2030s. They will increase by more than 15 days in the eastern part of the Jammu and Kashmir,” the ISRO report says.
The report says the loss of water bodies had its bearing on local micro-climate with the mean temperature in summers rising to 39.5 Celsius in 2006 as compared to 35.5 degree Celsius in 1973 which makes another flood imminent.
It says the Kashmir region is more vulnerable to long spells of high intensity rains because of global climate change and the geography of the region which can, in future, increase the frequency of floods in Kashmir.
“Many times clouds entering into the valleys are not able to escape because of high hills. They go on accumulating and ultimately burst into a high intensity rain. Himalayan water tower consisting of glaciers, snow, rainfall and lakes/wetlands has high potential of flooding being hiked by increasing number and intensity of extreme storms because of climate change,” the report says.
The projections made by the ISRO report are backed by a report prepared in 2005 by an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which says that there will be an “increase in the incidences of rainfall in Asia”.
The ISRO report says the floods are going to be a “very critical issue” in Kashmir “because there is only one flood water outlet of Jhelum river and a lot of civil constructions like houses, roads, etc. is taking place along it and extreme rainfall events are going to multiply in future.”
The report has recommended that an alternate flood spill channel for Jehlum must be dug up. “Feasibility study for digging a flood channel from Sanagam/Kandizal to Wular should be carried out. The spill channel running across Peerbagh and Nambali-Narkur can be widened to receive the waters of Doodhganga Nallah,” it says.
The report says that the bunds and embankments of Jehlum should be raised so that the low lying areas around them are safe. It has also recommended that the natural existing drainage networks of Jehlum must be made “viable.”
“Improvement in the river flood channels to hold water beyond 35000 cusecs with current capacity of 15000 cusecs by a comprehensive de-siltation programme both for river Jhelum and its tributaries. Retrofitting of dangerous buildings, flood zoning, relocation of buildings very close to the river banks, strict regulations to check future interferences with drainage system, restoration of wetlands and river training works will be able to minimize infrastructural damages and human miseries,” the report says.
Over 280 people were killed and millions were affected by the flood which struck the region in the first week of September. The economic losses caused by the deluge are estimated to run in billions of dollars with many businesses closing down in the wake of a liquidity crunch.
So far, the government has not announced any major rehabilitation package for the affected people, many of whom continue to live in makeshift tents. With the winters approaching fast, the anger is growing in the region which is going to polls on November 25.
Ambreen Hamadani
The streets of Rajbagh are dilapidated. They are dark with few houses lit up with electricity. Boundary walls are in ruins everywhere and most of the houses long to turn to homes again.
The month of September has been terrible for the residents of Rajbagh, with about twenty feet water filling their homes left, right and centre. More difficult than the initial shock have been the dismal days that followed.
There were times when nobody really believed that things would return to normal ever. I do not know what the people of “non flooded areas” say or have said about Rajbagh and why, but surely these were trying times for even the toughest souls alive.
People clung to optimism, making desperate attempts for survival. It was heartbreaking to be trapped in your own home; a place synonymous with comfort and security, to live in constant fear that the house could collapse anytime.
A look down the stairs showed the site of menacing waters just a few steps below. Seeing large boats sailing over your garden, sheds and walls is not a pleasing experience. But as the saying goes ‘Tough times never last but tough people do’, people have survived with the grace and mercy of the Almighty. But the journey has not ended here. The nights still are sad and full of foreboding silence. Even a screech from an owl is welcome.
Does all this mean that Rajbagh has given up? And that the flickering candle of hope has finally blown out?
Nay! The radiance that lights the faces today tells a different tale. Everyone present is smiling and the melody of Wanwun fills the air with a new and refreshing glow.
A car stands bedecked in the middle of the unfortunate street and the warrior of a groom sits inside. The fleet of cars is small, but the charm is immeasurable. The women there to bless him are few in number but their hearts are alive with love and affection. Their attires are simple and their feet planted in mud, yet their voices are sweet and heartening like warm fire on a cold winter night. Their spirit is contagious; it fills the air with light heartedness and brings spring to every step.
The scene of the recent disaster is not forgotten though. It looms all over like a threat. Everywhere, your gaze is met with telltale signs of floods. However, a light has been lit today and it is powerful enough to keep worries at bay.
Jhelum entered Ragbagh furiously, blowing off anything and everything. It ripped apart families, blew happiness into smithereens, leaving each household dilapidated and desolate. Depression covered the place like a canopy. Rajbagh, oozed out of the muddy waters and stayed even when the water receded.
The dark veil has slowly started to lose its power and the sun has begun to peep through the clouds. It takes a great deal of courage to fight your enemies but it takes a great deal more to fight the sorrow within your heart.
Marriages take place all the time but this one is different. No light can decorate the house and there is no extravagant feast and yet this is the happiest marriage in the world. Today people are celebrating life; celebrating the fact that they are alive and back on firm ground after many long and tedious days. But this marriage is symbolic as it bought happiness for whole locality.
There still is a long way to go and much to do. There will be no end to cleaning and reconstructing and it will demand every bit of energy and strength. To a heart that is torn with sorrow, a single shop reopening, a street vendor or even a small lamp brings infinite joy. And to see an event as “normal” as a marriage fills the air with a new refreshing fragrance assuring the sad hearts that, “we shall overcome some day!”
Truly, strong are the people who leave their worries behind and go in search of sanguinity. For hope is a thing with feathers that flies near your heart, willing you to capture it and turn it into something very beautiful. And I firmly believe that Rajbagh will rise again, the way it was before.
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Jeddah: Sheikh Abdul Qadir Taha Al- Sheibi, who held the traditional key to the Kaaba, died in Makkah on Thursday. He was 74. The Al- Sheibi family has been holding the position of key- keeper since pre- Islamic times. The family of the present custodians is linked to Sheiba bin Othman Abi Talha who lived during the time of Prophet Muhammad ( SAW).