Mehbooba’s healing touch policy hit as Kashmir remains on edge
Daanish Bin Nabi
Even as reports emerge that Hizbul Mujahideen commander
Burhan Wani’s encounter may have been ‘stage-managed’, the People’s Democratic
Party’s (PDP) much-touted ‘healing touch policy’ seems to be falling apart
within three months of Mehbooba Mufti’s taking over as Jammu and Kashmir chief
minister.
Mufti’s government gravely mishandled the situation after
Burhan’s encounter. The security forces have claimed that the encounter took
place at Bumdroo village in Kokernag. Voices are getting louder each day that
the encounter was stage-managed by the security forces.
Reports in leading national newspapers and a story confirm
this. Veteran journalist Prem Shankar Jha put these speculations to rest when
he wrote, “Every bit of information that has surfaced suggests that the
encounter, if not the actual killing, was choreographed.” This has enraged
Kashmiris even more.
Palpable Anger
There are also reports suggesting that the security
apparatus killed Burhan with Mehbooba’s approval. It doesn’t take long for one
to understand why the house in Bumdroo where Burhan was killed was torched by
the enraged people.
Last Friday night, two men, including a relative of a former
cop-turned-surrendered militant, were shot at and injured by militants in
Pulwama district. Both of them were cousins of Tariq Ahmad Pandit, a militant
who had surrendered in May this year.
Healing Touch Not
Visible
Even after the death of 43 people, neither BJP nor PDP
politicians were seen in public. About 1,600 injured youth remain admitted in
three major hospitals. The state’s health minister, who is from the BJP, is yet
to visit the hospitals.
Mehbooba too has not visited the injured, most of whom are
from south Kashmir, which is the PDP’s. On ground, it is literally people
versus the armed forces. It seems that PDP’s healing touch is dying a slow
death.
The government is doing everything under its control to stop
the civilian killings in Kashmir. In doing so, our alliance partner, BJP, is
fully supporting us.
Naeem Akhtar, Founding Member and Spokesperson, PDP
There have also been reports that the BJP may attack the PDP
in the ongoing monsoon session of Parliament. Naeem Akhtar rubbished these
claims. He called them “manufactured news only to create a wedge between PDP
and BJP, and not the case in reality.”
Reminiscent of ’75 Emergency
As the ongoing turmoil in Kashmir enters its 11th day, the
state government’s crackdown on the media continues. In the wee hours of
Saturday, the police raided Press Colony in Srinagar to seize local newspapers.
Internet services, including BSNL, have been suspended across Kashmir. Cable TV
services have also been snapped. The suspension of newspapers and broadband
internet services has paralysed the work of journalists and media outlets,
especially online media. This is depriving people of access to information and
disrupting communication, leading to a fear psychosis.
Irshad Ahmed Khan, the driver of a local newspaper, had a
harrowing time with the state police on Saturday. A police vehicle started
following his van soon after he left the printing press in Sheikhpora,
Srinagar, at about 3 am.
Initially, I was confused whether this was a routine patrol.
By the time I reached Press Colony, four-five police vehicles had surrounded my
van. They ordered me to go back to Humhama police station. Our newspapers were
seized. I did not argue with them as I feared for my life. They even took the
wastage paper material of our printing press. They arrested the drivers of
another newspaper. Fortunately, I was allowed to come back to office.
Irshad Ahmed Khan
Many journalists feel as if the Emergency had returned to
haunt the valley. Yusuf Jameel, a
veteran journalist, says the Valley has been through worse. “Successive
governments have made the same mistake here. They have not learnt from their mistakes.
There was a media gag in 2008, 2009 and 2010, but Kashmir was still reported to
the outside world.”
There is outrage among Kashmiri civil society members and
academics for mishandling the Burhan Wani case. Dr Sheikh Showkat Hussain, Dean
of Law Department of Central University of Kashmir, says: “Instead of a
crackdown on media, New Delhi should go in for a crackdown on those who have
been creating an illusion of normalcy because of a lull since 2010 in lieu of
favours they enjoy.”
Young Men Gone Missing
One of the most worrying issues this time in Kashmir will be
the boys who have gone missing since Burhan’s funeral. A senior police official
who did not want to be identified said, “There are boys who have gone missing
after Burhan’s funeral. We are doing everything to trace them but so far there
is no news of these boys.” Many in Kashmir believe that all these boys have
joined the militant ranks.
South Kashmir is volatile and several incidents of violence
and militant attacks have gone unreported because of internet blackout by the
authorities.
Publsihed in The
Quint on July 19, 2016