Sending Yasin Malik Away for Life Won’t Help India Solve the Problem of Kashmir

Is he guilty of the charges? There’s no reason to assume he’s not, but states that are serious about peace have ways of dealing with such crimes, as New Delhi has done with the NSCN (I-M).

A version of this article first appeared in The India Cable – a subscribers-only newsletter published by The Wire and Galileo Ideas. You can subscribe to The India Cable by clicking here.

The conviction and sentencing of Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front leader Yasin Malik to consecutive life sentences by a special court last week has been hailed by supporters of the Modi government as a great step towards what they believe is the end of the ‘Kashmir problem’. But is it really?

Malik did not contest the charge of terror financing brought against him by the National Investigation Agency and is unlikely to appeal his conviction. Besides other charges, he also faces trial for the 1990 killing of four Indian Air Force men. An anti-terror court last year framed murder charges against him, though it is not clear why it took 31 years for the matter to reach that stage if the evidence against him was all that compelling.

In the terror financing case, the prosecutor sought the death penalty, citing vague claims that Malik was responsible for the forced exodus of Pandits from the Valley. The judge disagreed, but if and when Malik is found guilty of the 1990 killings, his execution, given the current political climate, is a foregone conclusion.

Such is the hubris and myopia driving current government policy towards Jammu and Kashmir that those in power have convinced themselves peace, security and stability in the Valley can be found at the end of a rope.

Human rights never mattered to successive governments in New Delhi once the insurgency in Kashmir began in 1989-90 but no prime minister was ever foolish enough to believe politics and statecraft were dispensable. This belief is Narendra Modi’s unique contribution to the Kashmir issue.

Of course, none of his predecessors were bold or sincere enough to follow through on sensible political initiatives domestically. Pakistan’s sponsorship of terrorist groups like the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba and Jaish-e-Mohammed gave New Delhi the alibi it needed to define Jammu and Kashmir as primarily a ‘security’ problem rather than a political one. Nevertheless, there was enough flexibility and acumen on Raisina Hill to take advantage of openings when they presented themselves – and Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh were quick to seize upon these. The Hizbul Mujahideen ceasefire of 2000 was one such event, the backchannel talks of 2004-2007 another.

While both prime ministers recognised the primacy of dialogue and engagement, especially on the domestic front, neither had the political strength or confidence to move ahead in addressing the grievances and expectations of ordinary Kashmiris.

When the BJP formed a coalition government in Jammu and Kashmir with Mufti Mohammad Sayeed of the Peoples Democratic Party in 2015 and even signed on to a forward-looking ‘agenda for alliance’, it seemed as if Narendra Modi too had adopted the same path as his predecessors – of recognising the political dimension of the state’s problems. But from day one, it became clear that Modi had only bought time. Central rule was imposed in 2018 and on August 5, 2019, Jammu and Kashmir was bifurcated and stripped of its autonomy and status as a state of the Indian Union.

That decision marked the formal end of politics and statecraft as we know it in Jammu and Kashmir. Mainstream political parties like the National Conference and PDP – which stood by the Indian state all these years – were vilified and their leaders imprisoned. Local elections were held in 2020 but elected officials do not even have the freedom to leave their homes. Unprecedented restrictions have been imposed on the media, human rights defenders and civil society organisations like the Bar Association. Terrorism FIRs and arrests under the Public Safety Act have skyrocketed. It is against the backdrop of this criminalisation of ‘mainstream’ politics and of any kind of peaceful political activity that the case against Malik needs to be seen.

The JKLF is a spent force, as is its leader. He commands no troops but the aspirations he represents and vocalises will not be stilled by his incarceration or execution. Is he guilty of the charges levelled against him? There is no reason to assume he is not, but states that are serious about finding a pathway to peace from years of conflict have ways of dealing with such crimes. That is why the Indian government had no qualms about engaging in protracted talks with the National Socialist Council of Nagalim, which had waged a war against the Indian state for decades. No one can seriously claim that the NSCN leaders who sat in the same room as Modi when the 2015 framework agreement for peace was signed did not have the blood of Indian soldiers on their hands. They did; and the Indian state was responsible for unlawful killings too. Yet both sides signed an accord without any great moral outrage from any quarters.

If anything, the fact that the Kashmir insurgency is today becoming more deadly is an argument for the Indian state to engage with all political figures – including separatists – who say they want a political solution. Instead of pursuing a ‘Nagaland’ strategy in Kashmir, however, the Modi government has widened the arc of those politicians whom it considers beyond the pale. Forget about the Hurriyat, its list of enemies now includes Mehbooba Mufti and other PDP leaders like Waheed Parra, as well as the leaders of the National Conference. The Indian state is throwing anything and everything at them, from terror charges to corruption, in an attempt to strip them of political relevance.

The Modi government is pursuing a political strategy built on repression and the gerrymandering of elections, underwritten by direct central control. There is no room for democratic politics. Nor is there a political safety valve or cordon sanitaire between the violence and resentment on the ground and ‘India’. Of course, there will be no peace or prosperity down this road and perhaps Modi knows this. What matters to him, however, is the optics of his ‘strongman’ strategy in the rest of India.

J&K: Breaking Silence, Mirwaiz Hurriyat Reiterates Call for ‘Peaceful Resolution’

In the backdrop of Syed Ali Shah Geelani’s resignation, some leaders of the separatist conglomerate met for the first time since the dilution of Article 370.

Srinagar: Breaking its months-long silence, the Hurriyat Conference led by Mirwaiz Umar Farooq held a meeting and reiterated its call for the Kashmir problem to be resolved through dialogue between India, Pakistan and the people of J&K.

Senior executive members of the separatist group met on Wednesday to discuss the situation in Kashmir. Prof Abdul Gani Bhat and Maulana Abbas Ansari, two former chairmen of the conglomerate, and Bilal Lone were among those who met.

The meeting of the conglomerate, which lasted more than an hour, was the first since the Centre unilaterally revoked J&K’s special status on August 5 last year. “It was a normal meeting. We hadn’t met for a long time,” Lone told the Wire.

Lone said the leaders had actually met to inquire about Ansari’s health, as he has not been keeping well for some time now. “Then, we also got a chance to sit and discuss different things about Kashmir and other issues,” Lone said.

The meeting comes days after Syed Ali Shah Geelani, who headed a parallel faction of the Hurriyat, resigned from the conglomerate and expressed dismay at his colleague’s ‘inaction’.

Also Read: Who After Geelani? Questions Over Leadership Have Opened Pandora’s Box for Hurriyat

‘Will continue to pursue peaceful resolution’

Meeting away from the media glare, the Hurriyat reiterated its “basic stand that the Kashmir dispute has to be resolved peacefully as per the wishes and aspirations of people of J&K, among the three stakeholders including India, Pakistan and J&K.”

Following the deliberations, the conglomerate issued a statement, its first in more than 11 months, vowing to continue to work towards the peaceful resolution of the Kashmir conflict.

The Hurriyat faction maintained that “dialogue among the three stakeholders is the best alternative method to resolve the issue that APHC (All Party Hurriyat Conference) has consistently advocated and even participated in,” adding resolution of the Kashmir issue was the “best guarantee of real peace and prosperity” in the subcontinent.

Mirwaiz, who has been under house arrest since August last year, could not attend the meeting, said the statement.

In the months leading up to the Centre’s dilution of Article 370, the National Investigation Agency (NIA) launched a massive crackdown against the separatist camp. JKLF chairman Muhammad Yasin Malik and the second rung leadership of the Hurriyat’s parallel faction, led by Mirwaiz and Syed Ali Shah Geelani, were among those arrested.

The NIA also questioned Mirwaiz, who is the chief cleric of the Kashmir Valley and delivers Friday sermons at the historic Jamia Masjid in Srinagar.

After the Centre read down Article 370 and Article 35A and bifurcated the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir into two Union Territories, all the separatist groups had disappeared from the scene. They also refrained from issuing any statement, even after the government began easing the lockdown in the Valley towards the beginning of this year.

‘Attempts at demographic engineering unacceptable’

The conglomerate has also opposed the new domicile rules under which several categories of people, and employees from outside J&K would be granted domicile rights in the UT.

The rules were introduced after the Centre abolished the Permanent Resident Certificate (PRC), which was issued to permanent residents of the erstwhile state of J&K under Article 35A.

“Since 1947, there have also been attempts to change the demographic character of J&K and in August 2019, a final nail in the coffin was hammered in this regard. These attempts at demographic engineering are completely unacceptable to the people of J&K who have totally rejected it,” said the separatist group.

Asking the government of India to stop issuing domicile certificates to “outsiders with the view to change demographic character of J&K,” the group said it was “causing great concern among people and could have serious consequences for the region.” “The APHC members advised people to be very vigilant,” said the statement.

Political analyst Noor M. Baba said separatist groups have been under “public scrutiny for their silence over the situation in Kashmir for almost a year now.”

“This possibly has led to rethinking within the camp. But at the same time, we need to realise that we have been through a very long and repressive spell, when common people even speaking up was seen by the state as anti-national,” said Baba, adding the meeting could be seen as the beginning of “gradual return of separatists to active politics.”

‘New situation has created new opportunities’

Baba also tried to link the latest utterances of the Hurriyat with the stand-off between India and China in Ladakh. “This new situation has created new opportunities. The priorities have changed. We also saw Farooq Abdullah raising the Kashmir issue after maintaining silence for months. They (the Hurriyat) are possibly looking for an opportunity to bring Kashmir back into focus amid the scenario that is developing within and around India,” said Baba.

According to Baba, there some within India believe that the policy of the present regime in New Delhi has “isolated” the country in the neighborhood.

“The government at the Centre has changed the country’s priorities in terms of foreign policy and relations with others in the neighbourhood. Its brand of nationalism is defined by enmity with Pakistan, separatists and Muslim bashing. They invested so much in trying to win over China but failed. This scenario presents an opportunity at a larger level on the Kashmir front,” Baba said.

Analysts have also noted that the meeting of the executive members comes barely days after senior separatist leader Geelani, who headed a parallel faction of the Hurriyat, resigned from the conglomerate which he has led since 2003.

Separatist leaders Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Mohammad Yasin Malik. Credit: PTI

Separatist leaders Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Mohammad Yasin Malik. Credit: PTI

In a detailed communication sent to the constituent groups, Geelani – who is suffering multiple ailments – accused his colleagues in J&K of having failed to respond to his repeated requests to meet and evolve a strategy to face the situation post-August 5, 2019.

The 91-year-old leader, who has been under house arrest for many years, claimed that it were his colleagues in the Hurriyat Conference who let him down, suggesting that he was not to be blamed for the “hibernation.”

Though Geelani’s move came as a surprise for many, within the amalgam it was being anticipated for a long time. “That the meeting took place in the backdrop of Geelani’s resignation is also important,” said Baba.

However, he said the latest statement of the Mirwaiz-led Hurriyat was “nothing new” but a continuation of its long stand on Kashmir.  “But it is important to see how they will move forward from here,” said Baba.

NIA Files Supplementary Chargesheet Against JKLF Chief Yasin Malik, Others

Former Jammu and Kashmir MLA Rashid Engineer has also been named in the chargesheet.

New Delhi:  The National Investigation Agency (NIA) on Friday filed a supplementary chargesheet before a Delhi court against JKLF chief Yasin Malik and several others in 2017 terror-funding case for allegedly conspiring to wage a war against the central government by carrying out terrorist and secessionist activities.

Separatists Asiya Andrabi, Shabir Shah, Masarat Alam Bhat have also been named as accused in the chargesheet. Former J&K MLA Rashid Engineer has also been named in the chargesheet, special public prosecutor Sidharth Luthra told PTI.

Additional Sessions Judge Rakesh Syal put up the matter for taking cognisance on October 23. The proceedings took place in camera.

The chargesheet, running into 3,000 pages, has alleged that the Pakistan High Commission supported the separatists through transfer of funds via financial conduits to create unrest in the Kashmir Valley.

Also read: The Vacuum of Mainstream Politics in Kashmir

The case relates to alleged terror funding in 2017 in the Valley and involves Jama’at-ud-Da’wah (JuD) chief Hafiz Saeed, the 2008 Mumbai terror attack mastermind based in Pakistan.

Separatists Shabir Shah, Masarat Alam Bhat and former Jammu and Kashmir MLA Rashid Engineer have also been named as accused in the supplementary charge sheet, NIA’s Special Public Prosecutor Sidharth Luthra said.

The offences for which the accused were chargesheeted fall under Sections 120B (criminal conspiracy), 121 (waging war against government of India), 121A (conspiracy to wage war) and 124A (sedition) of the Indian Penal Code and relevant provisions of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967.

Also read: Kashmir Under Siege: One Month of Silence

The NIA stated later in a press release that during the investigation, searches were conducted at nine locations in J&K and 400 electronic devices along with 85 incriminating documents were seized.

It said the role of the Pakistan High Commission in supporting the separatist and other networks through transfer of funds via financial conduits and in providing directions to continue the unrest in the Kashmir Valley has been clearly established during the investigation.

About 125 witnesses were examined during the probe, it said.

By Detaining Farooq, the Centre Signals its Contempt for Kashmiri Representation

In pushing J&K leaders out of the spectrum of political participation, the Centre is inching closer towards making an internal colony out of the erstwhile state.

The detention of Farooq Abdullah under the draconian Public Safety Act is a mockery of the law and the constitution.

The 81-year-old former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir has been under arrest since the August 5 lockdown that preceded the reading down of Article 370. But the decision to formalise his detention under the PSA came in the wake of MDMK chief Vaiko’s habeas corpus plea to the Supreme Court.

It is not as if the Supreme Court has covered itself with glory by going along with the government’s specious approach on Jammu and Kashmir. On Monday, while hearing another matter, a bench  comprising Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi and Justices S.A. Bobde and S. Abdul Nazeer ordered, “The state of J&K, keeping in mind the national interest and internal security, shall make all endeavours to ensure normal life is restored.”

Also read | ‘Urgent, Disturbing’: PIL in SC on Kashmir Children ‘Illegally Detained, Maimed’

Instead of worrying about national interest and  making theatrical gestures like promising personal tours of the state, the honourable judges should be doing what their job is — upholding justice, which has been under severe strain in J&K.

On the floor of parliament, on August 6, Union home minister Amit Shah had claimed that Farooq had neither been detained nor arrested. Photo: PTI

On the floor of parliament, on August 6, Union home minister Amit Shah had claimed that Farooq had neither been detained nor arrested, saying “He is at home on his own will.”

Now, suddenly, the government has discovered that the National Conference patriarch is a threat to public safety. Just what is this threat that requires his incarceration is not clear, unless it is the simple matter of not allowing him to express his opinion on the course of events the government has set in motion. As if this were not bad enough, it appears he has been confined to a single room in his house as part of his PSA detention.

Like all human beings and politicians, Farooq is not perfect. But he has, more often than not, been more sinned against than sinning.

The current dispensation is probably not well versed in history, so they may have forgotten the chain of events that led to the destabilisation of the Valley’s politics in the 1980s.

Also read: Modi and Shah Forget that Kashmir is No Tibet, India is No China

After the death of  Sheikh Abdullah in 1982, Indira Gandhi, in her wisdom, decided that Farooq Abdullah and the National Conference should ally themselves to the Congress party in the state assembly elections of June, 1983.

Realising that this would severely dent his credibility in the Valley, Farooq Abdullah resisted and instead allied himself to Mirwaiz Farooq. Their alliance swept the polls, but then Abdullah made the fatal move of calling an all-India Opposition conclave in Srinagar in October, 1983.

Farooq Abdullah even took a break from active politics, returning only when autonomy of J&K was relatively assured by the Deve Gowda government. Photo: PTI/Files

Indira Gandhi retaliated by having Arun Nehru and Mufti Mohammed Sayeed organise a coup (with the help of Governor Jagmohan) that led to defections from Farooq’s party and his replacement by his brother-in-law G.M. Shah as chief minister in July 1984.

Three years later, going against his better judgment, Farooq agreed to an alliance with the Congress in the 1987 elections. The elections were rigged to the point of irrelevance. In these circumstances, governance of the state took a major hit. Both the Union and state governments seemed unable to stem the decline, marked by the virtual boycott of the 1989 Lok Sabha elections in the Valley. It was in these circumstances that Pakistan  fanned the youth revolt that led to the rise of the insurgency in 1989-1990.

Even so, when the Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front launched its armed struggle, Farooq kept his wits about him. This came through when Rubaiyya, the daughter of the new home minister, Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, was kidnapped by JKLF elements demanding the release of their leaders in jail.

Also read: Kashmir – They Call It Peace

Farooq strenuously argued against any dealings with the JKLF. He used his contacts to pressure the JKLF to release Rubaiyya and had nearly succeeded when he was ordered by a committee of new Union ministers – Arun Nehru, I.K. Gujral and Arif Mohammed Khan – to release the JKLF leaders.

It was this single action that lit the fires that have ravaged the state since.

Between January 1990 and May 1996, Farooq stayed away from the state’s politics. In any case, this was a period when gunmen dictated the dialogue.

The Union government, increasingly desperate to show that normalcy had returned, continued to woo Farooq, aware that no election minus the NC would be deemed credible. It was only after a United Front government under H.D. Deve Gowda took office in New Delhi and promised “maximum autonomy” after the elections that Farooq relented.

He contested the elections, which was swept by the NC in September 1996.

Sheikh Abdullah addressing people in Kashmir. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

Farooq’s father Sheikh Abdullah addresses people in Kashmir. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Perhaps the most questionable aspect of the Modi government’s Kashmir policy is its decision to place all mainstream Kashmiri parties and their political leaders outside the pale of the country’s laws or for that matter, political processes. Only that can explain the pattern of detentions which range from a CPI(M) leader to the leaders and cadres of the NC, Congress and the People’s Democratic Party.

With the parties that upheld the country’s flag outside the pale, who does the government expect will take up the task of providing political leadership to the people in the Valley?

That is, unless the Union government is planning to treat the Valley as some kind of an internal colony of the country.

Representation in a legislature, both state and Union, is a basic right of the citizens of the country and the key building block of our democracy. Talk of Panchayati Raj just doesn’t cut it. Even with its forcible demotion, there is or will be a J&K assembly and most of those elected to it will be from the three major political parties.

So what can the government be thinking ?

Manoj Joshi is a distinguished fellow of the Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi.

IS Operative’s Killing Reveals Power Struggle in Kashmir Militant Ranks

Aadil Ahmed Dass’s murder comes at a time when radical pan-Islamist groups are desperate for a toe-hold in Kashmir.

Srinagar: Last Sunday, WhatsApp groups across the Kashmir Valley all received an unexpected video. In it, Syed Salahuddin, the leader of the Hizbul Mujahideen who is based across the Line of Control, made a surprising appearance.

With a chequered keffiyeh wrapped around his shoulders and a grey Hogan cap on his head, Salahuddin broke into a monologue, his voice thick with what appeared to be grief. His message was directed to the ‘jihadist’ community. For the most part, he urged it to avoid confrontation; offered his best wishes for militants to withstand the ‘travails of time’; and pleaded for unity.

It is not in Salahuddin’s repertoire to release video-taped appeals or announcements, so this was an unusual step. It is easy to surmise what could have spurred him. The Friday before, Aadil Ahmed Dass, a young militant affiliated with Islamic State Hind Province (ISHP) had died in Sirhama village of South Kashmir’s Bijbehara town. Rumours initially pointed the finger at ‘Indian agencies’ but now Aadil’s death appears to have been the result of fratricide, triggered by competing ideologies which have been increasingly fragmenting the militancy landscape in Kashmir. What could also have led to the murder is the competition for resources in the face of what many feel is a decline in Pakistani assistance.

Among observers here, Dass’s death is now being billed as a turning point for militancy in Kashmir. 

In Waghama village of south Kashmir, Dass’s brother Musaib sits reading from the Quran in his newly-constructed house. The walls are yet to be plastered. Mourners trickle in. Young boys, sitting in a circle around him, offer their condolences.

Also read: Behind the Spurt in Recent Encounters Lies the Flow of Recruits to Militancy in Kashmir

“We heard reports about his death in the evening. Then I was taken by the Army and stayed at their camp [Sirhama 16 RR] for the night. At 3:50 am, we left to get the body. When we approached the site, the army men took their positions. I walked for few metres and saw my brother’s body,” Musaib tells The Wire.

A few more metres away lay an injured Aarif Hussain, a Lashkar-e-Tayyaba militant, says Musaib. He broke down at the scene, he says, asking Aarif repeatedly why his brother had to be killed. 

“He told me that it was Zubair Wani, a Hizbul Mujahideen militant from Kokernag who killed my brother.”

Aadil Dass’s brother Musaib.

Aadil’s death has led to intense discussions in media circles. An investigation into the Telegram chats of pro-militant channels has cast light on the sequence of events which led to his murder.

The death appears to be the beginning of an internecine dispute between militant groups. A section has been gravitating towards pan-Islamist ideologies and this has fractured political opinion in Kashmir. His family says Aadil had appeared serious about his studies at the Degree College of Bijbehara until he disappeared from home on July 19, 2018 to join the LeT. His family had no idea that he had joined ISHP.  

A pro-ISIS march in Kashmir. Photo: Reuters

According to the detailed open-source investigation, militants from Lashkar and Hizbul had led Aadil into believing that they were defecting to the ISHP too. 

Hizbul’s Zubair and Lashkar’s Aarif and Burhan Ahmad lured Aadil to a secluded location at the Sirhama orchards. A fifth militant, Turaib, who was an associate of Aadil’s, was also present. Then, as the militants were praying, Zubair reached for his rifle and pumped a volley of bullets into Aadil, killing him. A bullet also accidentally hit his aide Aarif, who was hurt and incapacitated. While Turaib managed to escape, Zubair and Burhan grabbed Aadil’s weapons — the ones given to him by Lashkar — and fled.

The findings of the investigation matches the account given to The Wire by Musaib, who pins the blame squarely on Zubair. Aadil’s family also say that a few days before the Sirhama incident, two Lashkar militants had come to their house demanding money to the tune of Rs 12 lakh.

“They asked us to tell Aadil to either return the weapons or give them Rs 12 lakhs. This has all been done by Abu Talha, who currently heads Lashkar in the region,” Aadil’s mother told The Wire 

This incident comes at time when radical pan-Islamist groups are desperate for a toe-hold in Kashmir in the face of challenges in the form of pro-Pakistan groups like Hizbul.

Earlier this year, IS announced the formation of Wilayat al-Hind which will be dedicated to operations in Kashmir. Then there is the al Qaeda-affiliated Ansar Ghazwat-ul Hind which is also trying to carve a space for itself and has succeeded significantly in that regard, riding on the sympathy wave following Zakir Musa’s death on May 23.

Also read: Why Zakir Musa, Voice of a New Extremism in Kashmir, Survived as Long as He Did

On Monday, pro-ISHP social media outlets released a video showing three masked gunmen in uniforms bearing Islamic State insignia. In the video, the men can be seen boasting about having “succeeded” in establishing jihad on the basis of tauheed (the Islamic concept of monotheism) and tearing down the idols of “nationalism, democracy and politics of self-determination.” The words affirmed that theirs was not a fight on the Kashmir dispute but a fight on the question faith. The 38-second clip elicited a strong response from hundreds of Kashmiris on social media. Soon, the hashtag #RejectISIS began trending, as many expressed their strong denunciation of “perverted ideas of religion”. 

It is still not clear how Indian security officials view the unfolding developments — and whether this infighting offers scope for an intervention that could weaken militancy as a whole. But the episode bears strong resonances with a similar string of events that took place during the early 1990s, which gradually led to the total ouster of the indigenous Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) from the field of armed insurrection, thus setting the stage for pro-Pakistan and Islamist groups to wrest control of the mantle. 

The beginning

The first phase of the Kashmir insurgency was led by four men — Hameed Sheikh, Ashfaq Majeed, Javed Mir and Yasin Malik — all of whom, in one way or another, participated in the 1987 Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly election.

Together, they formed the nucleus of the JKLF which resolutely professed to be non-sectarian. The group led a host of attacks almost effectively paralysing the administration in Kashmir during the initial phases of militancy. The JKLF also commanded considerable support from the civil society of Kashmir. Doctors, engineers, intellectuals and lay people comprised its ranks.

Initially, the local guerillas far outnumbered those who would sneak in from across the border. For instance, in 1991, the number of local militants fighting the Indian forces was estimated to be 844. Only two were non-locals, according to official figures of that time. Formed in the 1960s, the JKLF had lived a frugal existence until then as much of the pro-independence mobilisation had been monopolised by National Conference – followed by the All Jammu and Kashmir Plebiscite Front.

Sheikh Abdullah. Credit: Wikimedia Commons

It was only after Sheikh Abdullah’s accord with the Centre in 1975 that his stock plummeted. The JKLF – harvesting support from the public disenchantment which followed – rose to popularity in the aftermath of the 1987 poll rigging. However, it was only a matter of time before Pakistan’s relationship with JKLF, committed as it was to the idea of an independent Jammu and Kashmir, ruptured.  

The ferocity with which the uprising erupted in Kashmir after the 1987 polls had surprised even those at the helm of affairs in Pakistan. 

Robert G Wirsing, a political scientist, observed, “While the People’s Party was yet in power, Pakistani leaders became aware of the need to assert more Pakistani control on the uprising…. In early February 1990, a meeting was held in Islamabad, with prime minister Benazir Bhutto in the chair and the chief of army staff, General Aslam Beg and the president and prime minister of Azad Kashmir in attendance. They decided they had to curb the Azaadi forces, meaning they would not equip them and not send them into the Valley.” 

By the end of 1989, the internal clout of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence had swelled enormously, primarily by way of its status as the sole implementing agency of the United States’ proxy war against the Soviets in Afghanistan. It was an “army within an army” which enjoyed an outsized “partnership with the CIA with periodic access to the world’s most sophisticated technology and intelligence collection systems. The service had welcomed Pakistan legions of volunteers from across the Islamic world, fighters who were willing to pursue Pakistan’s foreign policy not only in Afghanistan but also across its eastern borders in Kashmir,” journalist Steve Coll writes.

The slow fall of JKLF

From 1991 onwards, however, the ISI downgraded its aid to the JKLF, promulgating a two-pronged strategy to reorient the uprising in the Valley to its favour. First, it weakened the JKLF by inciting defections out of the group. Second, it engineered a rise of a pro-Pakistan jihadist superstructure spearheaded by the Hizbul Mujahideen.

A newspaper survey recorded that there was sudden spurt of at least 150 tanzeems countering JKLF. “Pakistan feared that a single body will settle with India as Sheikh did,” legal jurist A.G. Noorani has observed. 

Those who volunteered to take up this new role to fragment the movement were recruits looking for adventure, petty criminals, earnest Kashmiri youth who nursed a grouse against India and also foreign jihadists. For the next few years, the Indian state responded in a relentless, iron-fisted manner. It is estimated that between 1990 and 1992, 2,213 militants were killed – a majority of whom were JKLF fighters.

As for the four who began it all, Ashfaq Majeed died on 30 March 30, 1990 and Yasin Malik was detained on August 6 of the same year. Hamid Sheikh was also captured but released in 1992 by the Border Security Force which had, by then, realised that the JKLF might be instrumentalised to counter the Hizb. The Indian Army, which was against this decision, killed him in November of the same year.

April 1991 saw the first public confrontation between the JKLF and the Hizb. In February, 1992, the JKLF made an attempt to reclaim its space in the popular imagination when it called for a cross-LoC march to emphasise the unity between the two sides of Kashmir. Close to 30,000 people marched to the LoC, where Pakistani troops fired from their positions, killing 21 of them. 

This led pro-freedom demonstrators across the Valley to gather near the Hazratbal shrine in Srinagar ‘defying Indian curfew’ in an expression of solidarity. India Today magazine described the episode as “the first major victory for JKLF groups operating in the Valley over Pakistan-sponsored factions like Hizbul Mujahideen.”

Yet JKLF’s influence continued to suffer until Yasin Malik’s release from prison on May 17, 1994, after which he, as part of a last ditch effort to salvage the group’s importance, declared a ceasefire. 

In his book Kashmir: Roots of Conflict, scholar Sumantra Bose quotes a veteran Kashmiri journalist who says, “A total of 300 surviving JKLF members were killed by Indian counterinsurgency forces after the group’s unilateral ceasefire in 1994. Often Hizb members would provide information on their identity and whereabouts, thus completing the decimation of JKLF’s field presence.”

Hizb takes the mantle

These events pushed Kashmir to come under the direct influence of a pro-Pakistan fighting force, which was ironically leading a struggle for a population overwhelmingly pro-azadi in its outlook.

This was followed by the Hizb’s effort to recklessly weed out any opposition. Its fighters started assassinating members of civil society who were ideologically allied with the JKLF and those whose competing definitions for self-determination did not correspond with its own. The venerable human rights activist Hriday Nath Wanchoo and cardiologist Abdul Ahad Guru were some of the prominent individuals who became victims of Hizb hitmen.

The Hizb also brought a brand of narrow puritanism to the interpretation of faith and mounted attacks on local Sufi shrines. In June, 1994, its militants allegedly killed Qazi Nissar, a preacher revered in south Kashmir. Nissar had accused the group of “holding Kashmir to ransom, to hand over to Pakistan on a plate.”  At the qazi’s funeral, angry agitators shouted slogans like ‘Hizbul Mujahideen murdabad’ (‘down with Hizbul Mujahideen’).  

A paramilitary soldier patrols a deserted street during restrictions a day before the death anniversary of Burhan Wani, a commander of the Hizbul Mujahideen militant group, in downtown Srinagar July 7, 2017. Photo: Reuters/Danish Ismail

Scholar Paula Newberg observed in 1995, “Pakistan’s heavy influence on the movement is deeply resented especially among JKLF supporters. India clearly hopes to exploit this sentiment, once the Kashmiris find the fight is futile. In the long run, Pakistan’s powerful intervention may prove to have undermined the very uprising it sought to fortify.”

It was therefore the combined force of Indian counter-insurgency and Pakistan’s support for rival factions opposing the JKLF that caused the group’s downfall and led to the emergence of the Hizb, that then established its almost complete monopoly over the Kashmir insurgency.  

Resentment against Hizbul Mujahideen

The current crisis, however, seems to have been prompted by Pakistan’s sudden decision to cut off patronage to militant groups as it stares at the potential of being blacklisted by the Paris-based terror-funding watchdog Financial Action Task Force (FATF). It has banned several Islamic seminaries and seized assets that belong to militant groups over the last few months.

Also read: When Pro-Plebiscite Kashmiris Found Common Cause with ‘Hindu Nationalists’

Amid mounting global pressure, Pakistan has also renewed, at least as far as public optics are concerned,  its crackdown on Hafiz Saeed and charities owned by him. The lack of aid from Pakistan has led the Hizb’s operational chief in the Valley, Riyaz Naikoo, to concede that militant groups have now been forced to fight with small pistols. “While the enemy’s technology is increasing and they are armed with modern weapons, our weapons are decreasing,” he said last year, in a statement. Which brings us back to the Sirhama incident which seems to have been partially motivated by a duel between two groups over weapons.

Besides, Pakistan’s recent decision to tip Indian officials off on an IED attack in south Kashmir has cemented the belief among the young in the Valley that Islamabad may perhaps be self-seeking and opportunistic. It is this realisation that has bred a politics of despair in the region in which more radical forms of expressions are incubating. 

At his house in Waghama, Musaib and his family say they will not settle for anything less than retribution. “We want the killers of my brother to be punished,” he says.

Aadil’s funeral is the first in a while where no Hizb flags were raised. No pro-Hizb slogans were shouted either. Only Ansar Ghazwat-ul Hind and Islamic States flags were seen.

In fact, there is noticeable resentment against the Hizbul Mujahideen and Lashkar across Waghama. “It isn’t lost on us how Aadil’s murder at the hands of the Hizb received very little media coverage. The Hizb’s domineering attitude will soon end,” a student from the same village, who attended the funeral, says.

How strong can the pro-Islamic State winds blow, this reporter asked him. He smiled. “It’s already here and will grow stronger.” 

Shakir Mir is a Srinagar based journalist.

Amit Shah’s Visit Reflects Centre’s Indifference to Solving Kashmir Question

The Union home minister neither met separatists nor mainstream party leaders.

Srinagar: On June 22, days before Union home minister Amit Shah was to visit the state, Jammu and Kashmir governor Satya Pal Malik surprised many with a public statement in which he said that separatists were “ready for talks“.

“I’m happy that the temperature in the Valley has gone down… things are much better now. Look at Hurriyat, Ram Vilas Paswan stood at their door and they didn’t open the door. Now they are ready for talks,” Malik said, addressing a function in Srinagar.

The governor has been running the state for more than a year now after the fall of the coalition government of the People’s Democratic Party and Bharatiya Janata Party in June last year. As a direct appointee of the Centre, Malik, through his statement, positioned himself as the government of India’s spokesperson. He also seemed to suggest that the time was ripe for peace talks.

That the statement came just a few days before the maiden official visit to Kashmir of one of the most powerful ministers of the Modi cabinet added weight to its promise.

Also read: What Does Modi’s Second Term Portend for Kashmir?

But when the home minister finally landed in the Valley on his two-day visit beginning June 26, the issue seemed entirely missing from his itinerary.

Shah did not extend any olive branches to separatists, who had, this time, surprisingly not given a shutdown call in response to the high-profile visit. Calls for strikes across the Valley is a tradition the Hurriyat has maintained each time a prime minister or any senior Union minister has visited Srinagar.

Not only was a strike passed over, but moderate separatist leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq had, in fact, insisted on talks for more than a month, in interviews and statements to newspapers. He had even told the Indian Express that they would respond positively if the Centre was to “initiate meaningful talks” on Kashmir.

But the home minister followed his own script during his stay in Srinagar. While he chose not to speak to reporters directly, the message he sent was clear – the Centre will continue with its crackdown against militants and separatists.

“There should be zero tolerance towards terrorism and terrorists, and there should be continued strict action against terror funding,” Jammu and Kashmir chief secretary B.V.R. Subrahmanyam said at a press conference, quoting Shah on the second day of his visit after he chaired a meeting to review the security scenario in the state.

At the same time, in what may well be seen as a snub to regional political parties, Shah also decided against meeting them, though he gave an audience to a few BJP leaders and workers and a select group of panchayat representatives and members from the tribal community of Gujjars.

In fact, while the home minister was in town, the Income Tax department carried out raids at several places, both in Kashmir and Jammu. Six of the raided premises belong to the family of Abdul Rahim Rather, a senior National Conference leader.

Many in Kashmir saw a “clear message” from New Delhi in the manner in which the Union minister neither engaged with mainstream parties nor showed any signs of the Centre warming up to separatists for a dialogue on Kashmir.

A senior political analyst said the BJP and Centre have been trying to reconstruct the narrative and lay the foundation for their own brand of politics in Kashmir.

Also read: In Kashmir, Power Eludes Those Who Wield it

“They want to create their own stakeholders in the Valley and have already begun acting on their long-term strategy of weakening not only separatists, but even those political actors who represent secular, regional and nationalistic aspirations in Kashmir,” says the analyst on condition on anonymity, adding that it is in this context that “we need to analyse the home minister’s visit and also his decision to stay away from meeting leaders from state political parties.”

From Modi 1.0 to Modi 2.0, the BJP-led government has continued its approach towards Kashmir. After breaking all communication channels with Pakistan, the Centre then went after the separatists, and at the same time continued with anti-militancy operations, with security forces killing 733 militants since 2016 – 117 of them in the first six months of this year.

Barring Mirwaiz and Syed Ali Shah Geelani, most of the separatists, including Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front chairman Muhammad Yasin Malik and almost the entire second rung of the Hurriyat’s leadership, are languishing in jails in and outside the state.

JKLF chief Yasin Malik. Credit: PTI

The fact that the Centre has put its own interlocutor on Kashmir, Dineshwar Sharma, in what can only be described as ‘pause mode’ for almost eight months now, shows that the Centre does not want to be seen conceding on Kashmir.

The last time Sharma was part of any sort of interaction in Kashmir was in November, 2018. Though he visited Srinagar again on June 11 and met governor Malik, there is no certainty as to whether the Centre will give him a go-ahead to resume his mission in Kashmir any time soon.

Political commentator Siddiq Wahid says, having relied heavily on its muscular policy when it comes to Kashmir, the Centre cannot be expected to change its stand anytime soon.

“These are early days of the second chapter of the government at the Centre and we will have to wait for the next three to four months before we get an idea on how the government wishes to go ahead on Kashmir,” says Wahid.

Wahid, however, adds that it is unlikely that the government of India would give up its present policy and walk the path of reconciliation when it comes to Kashmir.

A senior state BJP leader that this reporter spoke to agreed. “Under the governor’s rule we have been able to break the back of militancy and corner those who have been fomenting trouble in the Valley, including separatists,” says the BJP leader, who was a minister in the previous state government.

Also read: If the Past Year in Kashmir is Any Indication, Delhi Must Brace Itself for Worse in 2019

He says the Centre’s priority is to get the “situation back on track” in Kashmir before taking the next step of holding assembly elections in the state.

The Centre, however, seems to be in no mood to enable elections, which are long overdue, to take place in Kashmir. This has become evident after the home minister flew back to New Delhi on June 27 and moved the resolution in parliament to extend president’s rule in the state by six months, from July 3. Amid criticism from the opposition, the Lok Sabha gave its nod to the bill.

This has dashed the hopes of state parties, particularly National Conference, which has been repeatedly seeking elections in the state. Party vice-president and former chief minister Omar Abdullah said he had expected that the home minister’s visit would give the Centre a “better understanding” of the situation in Kashmir and the “need to change the approach to the state”.

Shedding light on how things will pan out in the coming days, Wahid says the Centre’s approach towards Kashmir should not surprise anyone at all. “This is an authoritarian government which hardly bothers to take anybody on board when it comes to Kashmir,” he adds.

Delhi Court Sends JKLF Chief Yasin Malik to NIA Custody till May 24

JKLF chief Yasin Malik has been arrested in a case related to funding of separatists and terror groups in Jammu and Kashmir.

New Delhi: A Delhi court Wednesday sent JKLF chief Yasin Malik, arrested in a case related to funding of separatists and terror groups in Jammu and Kashmir, to judicial custody till May 24.

Additional Sessions Judge Rakesh Syal also sought reply from the defence counsel on a plea of Tihar jail authorities seeking to produce Malik through video conference due to security concerns.

The court had sent Malik to NIA custody. He was brought to the national capital after a court in Kashmir granted his transit remand to the National Investigation Agency.

The Jammu and Kashmir High Court has reserved its judgment on a CBI plea for reopening three-decade-old cases in which Malik was an accused.

The Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief is facing charges of kidnapping and murder for being allegedly involved in abducting Rubaiya Sayeed, daughter of then Union Home Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed in 1989, and killing of four Indian Air Force personnel in 1990.

The JKLF was recently banned under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Amid Simmering Anger Over Militant Killings, Poll Fervour Missing in South Kashmir

“People here don’t talk about elections. We remember our dead. They are our legacy.”

Pulwama/Shopian: In the recently concluded elections in the Valley’s two Lok Sabha constituencies, Baramulla and Srinagar, the poll campaigning was intense – and bitter too. The restive southern segment of Anantnag, which goes to polls next, stands distinctively apart.

Not only is the election atmosphere missing altogether in the region, but even the occasional ‘rallies’ by politicians are also organised in fortified dak bungalows and town halls of Anantnag and Kulgam districts – in a desperate bid by parties to give some semblance of an election in the constituency, the centre of Kashmir’s renewed militancy.

For each such programme, the workers are bused to the venue and frisked thoroughly before they are made to listen to the speeches of their leaders. After that, they quietly disappear into the lanes.

In the other two districts of the constituency, Pulwama and Shopian, none of the parties has held any poll-related activity in public – not a single one – ever since the election dates were announced on March 12. In fact, the local representatives of rival parties hold closed-door meetings with small groups of workers to strategies for the election.

Missing poll campaigning in restive south

Unlike in northern and central Kashmir, the roads and streets in the south are colourless this poll season. There is no competition among supporters of rival parties to deck them with buntings, posters, hoardings – the symbols of an election – and pictures of their favourite politicians. In fact, there are no supporters to be seen at all on the roads.

“They (mainstream politicians) don’t dare to venture here,” said Javaid Ahmad – who this reporter offered a ride to from his native village of Wurwan up to Pulwama town. Then, justifying his statement, Ahmad added that for past over three years, none from “their” side have been seen in public, in the town or in any of the villages.

His mention of mainstream leaders as “they” speaks volumes about the growing chasm between local population and politicians in the region and could well explain the missing poll fervour.

“People here don’t talk about elections. We remember our dead, young and old, students and teens. They are our legacy,” Ahmad, who works as a salesman at a shop in the main market of the town, responded to a question.

Known as the rice bowl of Kashmir, Pulwama includes over 327 villages with a bustling market. It also includes Pampore town – located on Srinagar-Jammu highway – which is known for growing saffron, world’s costliest spice.

Stranded tricks on the Jammu-Srinagar highway on April 7, 2019. Credit: PTI

In the past three years, however, the stories coming from Pulwama have been about death and destruction. Dozens of young educated men, who disappeared from their homes to pick up guns, have gotten killed in gunfights with security forces since the uprising in the summer of 2016. Like other districts, Pulwama too has seen civilian causalities during these encounters, occurring when people rush to help trapped militants escape.

While the number of gunfights has now gone down, the ground continues to swell with anger. “Everybody knows why there is no poll activity here. It doesn’t need any explanation,” a senior leader of a regional political party told this reporter at his residence in Pulwama.

Also read: Why Educated Kashmiri Youth Continue to Join Militancy

Though he described himself as a party “loyalist”, this election he has chosen “to stay quiet”.  “These are hard times. There is no mainstream politics here. In fact, it has long died in the district,” he said, putting part of the blame on “leaders from Srinagar” too.

Since 2016, political parties have been pushed to the margins in the south. None of the senior leaders have visited the hinterland fearing peoples’ ire, limiting their activities to official spaces only, like dak bungalows and government buildings.

“There has been a complete disconnect,” the political leader tried to reason. “May be visits by leaders and occasional meetings with workers could have helped.”

Not on the people’s mind

But his assertion has no takers in the villages where people see mainstream politics as a “disgrace”. Take the example of Karimabad, a village located just 8-10 kms from the town. On Friday (April 19), a group of youth sat on a roadside debating the ban on civilian traffic on Srinagar-Jammu highway and its impact on life in villages dotting state’s principal road.

Will people vote in this village, I asked them. “Vote for whom…those who are responsible for filling these graveyards?” one youth who identified himself as Iqbal responded, pointing towards a local graveyard.

Also read: Highway Ban in Kashmir Sparks Outrage, Comparisons With Israel

Karimabad hogged headlines in March 2015 when a policeman from the village, Naseer Ahmad Pandit, escaped along with two rifles. Three other boys from the village, including, Afaq Ahmad, went missing the same day and joined militants along with Pandit. Both Pandit and Ahmad were among 11 militant who later posed with young rebel commander Burhan Wani in an iconic picture in 2015.

The duo was later killed in separate encounters and lay buried in the Karimabad graveyard along with several other militants from the village. “Nobody comes to ask for vote here. They know what they will get in response,” said Iqbal as a group of youth burst into laughter.

This anti-poll atmosphere runs through the surrounding villages. In Drubgam, the native village of slain militant commander Sameer Ahmad Bhat, alias Sameer Tiger, banners of fallen militants still hang in market and streets. Sameer, the long-haired youth with piercing eyes, and the main recruiter for Hizbul Mujahideen was killed in an encounter last April.

“The lines have already been drawn. Indian politicians are banned in this part of the world,” Mushtaq Ahmad, a neighbour of Sameer told The Wire.

In neighbouring Shopian district, at least 57 militant were killed in gunfights last year. In its villages, pro-freedom graffiti and names of militants written across boundary walls of houses and shop shutters, although withered, remain as the most visible sign of the conflict.

Security personnel in Shopian. Credit: PTI

‘We can’t betray our heroes’

Tucked deep inside orchards, around 12 kms from the Srinagar-Jammu highway, one such village is Heff – the native place of slain district commander of Hizb, Saddam Padder. Lashkar-e-Taiba district commander Wasim Shah alias Osama, who remained active for six years also hailed from Heff. In the past three years, at least seven militants from Heff have been killed in gunfights.

Today, these militants have become a part of folklore, and people, young and old, engage in discussions about their decision to give up comforts and “sacrifice lives for a cause”.

Also read: Has Kashmir’s Militancy Entered its Most Lethal Phase Yet?

“They are our heroes. How can we betray their cause and vote for those who brought miseries in our lives?” a youth, Ishfaq Ahmad said. He said he was a close friend of Shah.

Like Pulwama, local politicians in Shopian don’t come out in public to campaign for their candidates, and senior leaders from all parties have not even entered the district that sits in the lap of Pir Panjal mountain range and is one of the more prosperous districts of J&K. The fruit industry drives the economy of people here – hence, the name the ‘apple bowl’ of the state.

In the renewed Kashmir militancy, Shopian has emerged its epicentre. People here openly espouse the separatist cause and young boys talk proudly of their “heroes” from the neighbourhood who have joined the ‘tehreek‘ – the resistance movement – or lost their lives in it.

Aijaz Ahmad Mir, the former legislator of the PDP who represented Wachi constituency of the district, candidly acknowledged the missing election atmosphere. “The situation was not conducive for polls in Kashmir,” he tried to argue, sitting with a few dozen workers at his home to strategies for the election.

His party president, Mehbooba Mufti is contesting the seat in what is being described as the most decisive battle of her career. She is facing a challenge from Congress’s G.A. Mir and NC’s Hasnain Masoodi, a retired high court judge.

Mehbooba Mufti. Credit: PTI

“There is also fear of militants,” Mir said, referring to the latest threat by Riyaz Naikoo, Hizb’s operational chief and most wanted militant in Kashmir.

When asked why none of the parties including PDP has held even a single rally in the district, Mir said his party was planning one next week.

But across the district, which has been categorised by security agencies in three zones – Zainapora, main Shopian and Keller – mainstream politics is the least talked about during discussions among people.

Will it be another first?

The situation is no different in Kulgam where “electioneering” hasn’t moved beyond the four walls of the town hall. In areas like Redwani, Khudwani, Qaimoh and Yaripora, the 2016 uprising and the killings, of both militants and civilians, are still fresh in people’s memories.

“We stand with our martyrs and not the traitors who remember people in times of elections only,” said Zareefa of Rampora, a village known by locals as “Shuhadapur” (the village of martyrs).

Also read: Anger Brews in Kashmir After Militants’ ‘Unpardonable’ Use of Young Boy as Human Shield

Among the militants from the area is Hizb commander Muhamad Abbas Sheikh. The Sheikh family has seen 18 of its men join militancy and get killed during the past 27 years.

But it is not only the “memories” of recent years, the sweeping arrests made by the authorities across south – many among them in Kulgam – in recent weeks have also added to the fresh wave of anger against the state parties.

These arrests are seen as being in line with the “plan to ensure smooth voting” in the south where authorities couldn’t hold a by-election to the seat for three years after it had fallen vacant in April 2016. The process had to be later cancelled, a first in the electoral history of Kashmir.

This simmering anger and the experience of 2016 may well have prompted Election Commission to divide polls to the constituency in three phases. While Anantnag will vote on April 23, Kulgam will go to polls on April 29. The elections for twin districts of Pulwama and Shopian are slated for May 6.

Will southern Kashmir write another first in the electoral history of Kashmir – an election devoid of a full-fledged campaign? “We are ready to ensure all arrangement for any political parties intending to hold the (election) programme anywhere in the constituency, but so far we haven’t got any such requisition from anyone,” a senior police official told The Wire.

North Kashmir: Relatively Peaceful Polling Day Ends on a Sour Note With Teen’s Death

Today’s was the first major election held in Kashmir after the by-polls to Srinagar in April 2017 where nine civilians were killed.

Kupwara/Baramulla: The day started rather quietly – expect for a village in Kupwara where a group of young boys pelted stones at a polling booth. In the evening, when the state election department released the overall poll percentage of the Valley’s Baramulla Lok Sabha constituency, it described the day as peaceful.

By 6:30 pm, however, news started pouring in about clashes in parts of Kupwara.

Minutes later another update followed: a teenage boy had been killed in clashes with security forces in Mandigam village; his death overshadowing the day of polling in the north Kashmir constituency, which is spread over three districts of Baramulla, Kupwara and Bandipora. The constituency went to polls during first phase of general elections in India.

Also read: Phase One: Voter Complaints Over Malfunctioning EVMs Pour in From Several States

The killing

A group of youth had taken to streets in Mandigam village of Kupwara and pelted stones on forces which were retreating after poll duty. In the ensuing clashes, 7th standard student, Owais Mushtaq was seriously injured by pellets fired by the forces.

A local journalist from Kupwara said 13-year old Mushtaq was rushed to district hospital where doctors declared him brought dead. “The boy had multiple pellet injuries to his body, mainly chest and head,” said Dr Rouf Ahmad, medical superintendent of the hospital.

The SSP Handwara Ashish Mishra said police has registered FIR into the incident and taken up the investigation.

Late in the evening, similar clashes broke out in Palhallan area of nearby Baramulla district which had witnessed near total boycott. At least 17 persons, including six force personnel, were injured in the protests there.

“A great day has ended on a very sour note. Such killings are a result of disproportionate force being used against the protesters, with a sense of impunity,” tweeted bureaucrat-turned politician Shah  Faesal.

“Those responsible for this gruesome murder should be booked immediately. The government can set an example by arresting the accused personnel on the basis of prima facie evidence,” he said in another tweet.

The poll day in the most watched constituency

At most places across north Kashmir, comprising of 15 assembly segments, long queues outside polling booths were missing. Instead, people dropped in in ones and twos to cast their ballot.

Being held amid boycott call given by separatists, the election is seen as a direct contest between National Conference’s Muhammad Akbar Lone and Sajjad Lone-led Peoples Conference’s Raja Aijaz Ali.

The Peoples Democratic Party, which saw several members like influential Shia leader Imran Ansari and ex-minister Basharat Bukhari, both from Baramulla, and Yasir Reshi from Bandipora, quitting the party last year following rebellion, represents the seat in parliament. The rebellion, many believe, dented the party’s prospects.

An elderly couple show their inked fingers after casting their votes at a polling station in Kupwara district in North Kashmir on April 11, 2019. Credit: PTI/S. Irfan

But independent candidate Engineer Rashid, who surprised many for the size of crowds he drew to his rallies, is being described as dark horse. Though many say he may end up playing ‘spoiler’ in the contest, other argued that the outspoken Rashid could surprise many.

The grand old party, Congress isn’t even in the contest. Across many polling booths, voters didn’t even know the name of the party’s candidate, Haji Farooq Ahmad Mir.

“I voted for hal (plough, the symbol of National Conference),” a youth in mid-20s said after casting his vote in Langate. “This (voting) is only way to ensure an end to the tyranny in Kashmir that we have been facing for past one year (the governor rule).”

As more people gathered around, he added: “Three young militants, including a teenager, were killed here towards end of last year. Go and visit their homes, the families are devastated and nobody has ever inquired about them. This is the story of every Kashmir family.”

At 1 pm, of 10,319 votes, 6,789 had been cast there, the highest in five assembly constituencies of Kupwara. The overall voting percentage in the district had crossed 21.

Inside a higher secondary school in Handwara, the native town of Sajad Lone, the mood was festive. Of total 2,004 votes, 961 people had exercised their rights.

Also read: Lok Sabha Elections 2019: As Polling Begins, EVM Glitches in Andhra, Assam

A burly youth who attempted to cast his vote a second time was caught by alert polling staff. “Everybody knows who is winning this election. We have a new leader now who doesn’t have the baggage of betrayals,” said a youth who identified himself as Iqbal, referring to Sajad Lone.

However, others had a different take. “Voting for them (PC) is strengthening BJP in Kashmir. I will vote for any party but them,” said another youth.

As the day wore on, people moved in groups towards booths. At Gushi, a small village in Kupwara town, the voters rush meant good business for Asif Ahmad who had set up a temporary tea stall in the premises of government school-turned polling booth.

“I have already sold more than 150 cups of tea,” an ecstatic Asif told The Wire.

While the young man was telling me about the brisk voting at the booth, an aged woman, helped by two young boys, came out of the booth. Her name was Mahti. “I must be around 82. I made sure to not to miss my vote,” the grey-haired woman said in broken words.

An elderly voters completes the formalities before casting hist vote at a polling station in Kupwara district in North Kashmir on April 11, 2019. Credit: PTI/S. Irfan

Asked which party she voted for, Mahti evaded giving a direct response. “It is a sin to waste your vote,” she said, as the boys helped her out of the booth.

As per the final figures, the overall voting percentage in Kashmir was 34.1 – 51.7% in Kupwara, 31.8% in Bandipora and 24% in Baramulla. In the last Lok Sabha polls, 39.1% of voters had cast the ballot in the constituency.

However, there were several pockets across the segment, the traditional strongholds of separatists, which witnessed a near total boycott, including Sopore, Palhallan, Baramulla town, and Hajin, which has over the years grown as a stronghold of militants. Just 10 votes of 2,236 were cast in all of Hajin.

Some other places like Babagund in Kupwara where nine houses were gutted in an encounter in February in which two militants were killed in fierce encounter along with five security force personnel. The village is still brewing with anger against mainstream leaders and it got reflected in today’s polls – of 861 votes only 14 were polled.

Also read: BSF Personnel Fire in the Air as People Try to Vote Without ID Cards in Kairana

Located on Srinagar-Baramulla highway, Palhallan town witnessed intense clashes late in the afternoon following which the forces fired teargas shells to disperse the protestors. Only nine votes had been polled at one of the polling booths in the town. One among them was a first time voter, Iqbal. “I voted for my party,” he said, without revealing the name of of the party. “The same party our family supports.”

Today’s was the first major election held in Kashmir after the by-polls to Srinagar in April 2017 in which nine civilians were killed in forces action during clashes with youth and come after a major crackdown by government of India on separatists and their alleged sympathisers.

Over the past one month, the Centre has taken several hard steps in Kashmir, banning religio-political organisation Jama’at-e-Islamia, JKLF and booking several alleged sympathisers of separatists under the Public Safety Act.

While the election was largely peaceful in north Kashmir, barring the death of teenage in pellet firing after polling hours, May 23 will be awaited with bated breath.

A political science student, Nazir Ahmad, summed up the scenario. Congress, he said, wasn’t even in the contest and PDP is “fighting for number second position”. “This fight is about hardcore support base of a party. Let’s wait and see whose cadre is faithful,” he said.

JKLF Chief Yasin Malik Arrested by NIA in Terror Funding Case

Malik was brought to New Delhi on Tuesday evening after a special NIA court in Jammu gave the go ahead for his custodial interrogation.

New Delhi: The National Investigation Agency (NIA) on Wednesday arrested Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) chief Yasin Malik in connection with a case related to the funding of terror and separatist groups in Jammu and Kashmir, officials said.

Malik was brought to the national capital on Tuesday evening after a special NIA court in Jammu gave the go ahead for his custodial interrogation by the probe agency, they said.

The JKLF chief, who was shifted to Tihar jail under police protection, was taken into preventive custody in February by the Jammu and Kashmir police and shifted to Jammu’s Kot Balwal jail.

Malik, whose organisation JKLF was banned last month by the Centre, is also facing two CBI cases. These relate to the kidnapping of Rubaiya Saeed, daughter of then Union home minister Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, in 1989, and the killing of four IAF personnel in 1990.

Also Read: Terror Funding: What Can Be Done to Cut the Pipelines That Flame Militancy?

The NIA registered a case on May 30, 2017 against separatist and secessionist leaders, including unknown members of the Hurriyat Conference, who have been acting in connivance with active militants of proscribed terrorist organisations Hizbul Mujahideen, Dukhtaran-e-Millat, Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LeT) and other outfits and gangs.

The case was registered for raising, receiving and collecting funds through various illegal means, including hawala transactions, for funding separatist and terrorist activities in Jammu and Kashmir and for causing disruption in the Valley by way of pelting stones on security forces, burning schools, damaging public property and waging war against India, the probe agency said in the FIR.

Hafiz Saeed, the Pakistan-based chief of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, the front for the banned LeT, has also been named as an accused in the FIR.