The rape of a 9-year-old in Baramulla would put a 'shaitaan to shame'
By Daanish Bin Nabi
Published by
Newslaundary on Sep 17, 2018
Consumption of charas
played an important role in the rape and murder of a nine-year-old girl in Lari
in the prelude to this year's Eid festivities.
It seems that the menace of drugs played a major role in the
rape and murder of a nine-year-old girl in Tanger, Lari area of Boniyar in
district Baramulla. Police sources revealed to Newslaundry that one of the
accused was high on drugs when he raped the nine-year-old girl. The business of
Charas in Boniyar is going on unabated as police authorities are trying hard to
keep the drug suppliers at bay. Also, the area is considered to be the supply
route used by drug suppliers for the entire region of north Kashmir.
The investigating officer in charge of the rape and murder
case, told Newslaundry: “Most youth of Lari belt are drug addicts. Charas,
which is easily available around the hillocks, is one of the main drugs taken
by the youth. Brown Sugar and Heroin are also in abundance here. It comes from
across the border. They (Pakistan) don’t send money nowadays; it (money) now
comes in the form of drugs. Sahil, the step-brother of the nine-year-old and
one of the accused in the case, is a regular Charas smoker.”
He said that the police had arrested seven people in the
area related to the drugs supply, but four main suppliers still remained at
large.
“Drugs played a major role in the rape and murder of the
nine-year-old girl in Lari village. Had the drug menace not taken over the
area, we may not have had this incident take place,” he said.
As the Eid festivities were around the corner on August 23,
the nine-year-old girl went to out to buy ice-cream but never returned back
home. She was taken by her step-mother, Fahmeeda, into the jungles of Tanger.
The road leading to the victim's house
An investigation officer provided the chilling details of
the rape to Newslaundry. He said that Naseer aka Gudu (35), a chronic drug
addict and a close friend of Sahil, was already in the jungle waiting for the
nine-year-old girl. She was first raped by Naseer, then by her step-brother
Sahil, and then by Sahil’s friend (also another drug addict) Kaisar. There was
another friend of Sahil namely Aadil but he did not rape her.
“When all three finished raping her, they asked Aadil to
come forward but by the time Aadil came near the nine-year-old, she was already
dead,” the investigating officer said.
While the gruesome act was going on, her step-mother
Fahmeeda, was standing there watching how the entire incident unfold.
“When we asked her (Fahmeeda) how she felt when all this was
going on, her response would even put the shaitaan to shame,” said the officer.
“When they were raping her, I didn’t feel anything. When she was crying, it
made me happy. When they finished raping her, then gauged her eyes out with a
knife, that time I felt a bit bad for her. This explains the amount of hate the
step-mother had for her child.”
The officer said that it was Kaisar who gauged her eyes out
with a knife.
Gudu committed vaginal rape with the victim, while Sahil and
Kaisar anally raped the nine-year-old girl. Then, Sahil hit her head with an
axe. She died instantly.
“After raping and killing her, Fahmeeda sent Aadil to fetch
acid from the nearby market,” said the officer. “They sprinkled acid not only
on her private parts but inside her mouth as well. Ninety per cent of the body
was unrecognisable.”
The heart-wrenching incident was best described by the
victim’s grandmother, at her modest home in Lari. She said: “A dreaded eagle
came and plucked-out my little angel from the flock of six siblings.”
Lari is a small village in Boniyar area. There are around 30
to 40 houses scattered around the hillocks in Lari. The village is surrounded
by thick jungles and hamlets like Tanger. A waste dumping site lies nearby
Tanger. An army camp is located close to this dumping site. The site is used
more by drug abusers than for the purpose of dumping waste.
The victim's house
One of Sahil’s neighbours told Newslaundry: “Sahil used to
be at this dumping site for hours, ingrained into charas. He was a regular
visitor at the dumping site. Sometimes, with other youth, Sahil used to spend
entire nights at the site.”
Sahil, a student of Trikanjan High School, was not good at
studies either; he would usually bunk classes and roam around with his friends.
“He would carry some of his clothes in his school bag,” said
the neighbour. “He would change his uniform and skip school. This was his
regular practice. He would roam around with his friends and was a regular
smoker.”
While all of Kashmir was celebrating Eid-ul-Adha on August
23, the brother turned beast was second in line to rape his nine-year-old
sister in the jungles of Tanger.
Mushtaq Ahmed, the father of the victim, has six children,
including the victim, from two marriages. He first got married to Fahmeeda in
2007-08 and then to Khushboo in 2011.
At first, Mushtaq was able to maintain the relationship
between his two wives but as time passed, differences grew between them, and
with the passage of time, Mushtaq became closer to Khushboo—whose daughter was
the nine-year-old victim—than towards Fahmeeda. Mushtaq’s indifferent attitude
towards Fahmeeda was one of the main reasons why she wanted revenge on Mushtaq.
The investigating officer said that it was only to avenge
Mushtaq that Fahmeeda took such a drastic step. “She basically wanted to avenge
Mushtaq for not paying attention to her.”
Khushboo told Newslaundry: “We (Khushboo and Fahmeeda) used
to fight with each other often. But none of us had imagined that it would come
to such a thing. We are only waiting for forensic reports so that we come to
know who the culprits are.”
Mushtaq, a baker by profession, said: “I don’t think that
Fahmeeda would do such a thing. Why didn’t this thing happen in the past? Why
did she wait for all these years? She could have done this much earlier as
well…”
When this reporter visited the victim’s house in Lari, apart
from the family and children, no one visited their place—which is in total
contrast with the tradition of Kashmir.
“We don’t want to go to their place,” said a neighbour.
“What happened in their home is totally against Kashmir’s tradition and
culture. Whatever happened, it only happened due to their internal family
dispute. They have brought a bad name to our village. The media is also playing
spoilsport; they have painted all of Lari with the same brush. If they
(Mushtaq’s family) had done anything wrong, then why is the media pointing
fingers at all of us?”