‘But Leave We Will’: Kashmiris Plan to Leave Valley Forever
By
Daanish Bin Nabi
The owners of Al Barq
Sanitation, a bustling warehouse in the heart of Srinagar city’s main market,
have started “exploring options”. This is code for making their plans to pack
their bags and leave the dread-filled Kashmir valley behind forever.
After New Delhi’s
“historic” decision on August 5, to demote a full-fledged state to a Union
Territory and bifurcate it, ordinary Kashmiris are living in abject fear. That
includes the family that started Al Barq in 1963.
Riyaz Hakeem’s grandfather
launched the company and it is a flourishing establishment. Yet, since August
5, the day a clampdown was tightened around Kashmir, the family has not opened
the warehouse-showroom even once. “We have run into losses of hundreds of
thousands of rupees,” Hakeem says.
At his lavish residence in
Srinagar, Hakeem discusses the possibilities of growing his business in future,
making up his present losses and the politics of Kashmir as a Union Territory.
His father and two siblings, also engaged in the family business, join.
“We have decided to move to
Turkey,” says a frightened Hakeem. “We will wind up everything here and move to
someplace safer,” he says.
The family’s reasons for
moving are that there is “no guarantee of life” in Kashmir. Frequent closures
of their warehouse due to hartals and shutdowns have finally exhausted them. “I
have asked my sons to go out and see where can we settle and move our business.
We don’t want to live here anymore. We are exploring two to four countries to
move ourselves and our business to,” Hakeem’s father, Abdul Hakeem Ahangar
says.
Ahangar says that many
Right-wing groups have become emboldened ever since the special status of Jammu
and Kashmir was withdrawn. They want to swamp Kashmir now, he feels. “Article
370 was a cover [protection] for us. They snatched it from us. They only wanted
our land. They can have it and turn it into another Palestine,” Ahangar says.
Ahangar’s oldest son Majid,
a soft-spoken man who also helps with the family business, is skeptical about
the media: “We don’t want to reveal to anybody which country we will be moving
to,” he says. “But move we surely will.”
Their mother listened to
the conversation from a distance, keeping quiet.
Al Barq Sanitation has 23
employees. “We pay around $400,000 every month [altogether] to all our
employees,” Hakeem says.
Of late Hakeem and his
friends have been talking a lot of where they can relocate to. Some of his
friends want shift to Bangalore to the south along with their families and
restart their enterprises there. But Hakeem has been asking them to “better
move to a safer place once and for all”. Relocating within India, where the
Muslims are a minority, is not an option he takes seriously.
Many other relatives and
friends of this family plan to shift out of Kashmir now, from fear of being a
“Muslim minority in a majoritarian Hindu state”.
Fleeing students
Families in Kashmir are
also planning to send children outside the country to be educated. “Once the
clampdown is over and communication is restored, I will check the possibility
of sending our children to Canada or the United Kingdom,” says a resident of
Hyderpora in the Civil Lines area of Srinagar.
This man says that during
the 2016 civilian unrest in Kashmir, students had to go through a traumatic
phase of not attending school. “An entire academic year was lost. Frequent
unrest has had a negative impact on our children. We are planning to send them
outside now,” he says.
Another resident, from
North Kashmir’s Baramulla town, says that his son will lose an entire academic
year if he does not join a college outside the Valley. “The last communication
from his university [Islamic University of Science and Technology] came on
August 7, when semester exams were going on. That announcement said that their
exams have been postponed until August 9—two days. But there has been no
communication between the university and students ever since,” says the father
of a B.Tech student.
He plans to go to New Delhi
and try to enroll his son at a university there. “His friends have been asking
him to come to Sharada University, where there still are some vacant seats as
the admission process is not complete yet. It is better he goes there, gets a
degree and flies to a foreign country before things turn for the worse over
here,” he says.
Students of Kashmir already
go to North American universities or to the East Asian countries, such as
Malaysia. “I have to appear in the 10th class examination this year; but am
travelling to Malaysia to check the admission process. The Malaysian
universities recruit students over September and January. If I have to reappear
for 10th class there, I would do so happily in order to continue my education,”
says Syed, a student from Central Kashmir’s Bemina.
Individuals spoken to did
not want to reveal their names from fear of being arrested.
Published
by Newsclick on 09 September 2019