Kashmiri Pandits in a state of churn after spurt in targeted killings
By Daanish Bin Nabi
From January 19, 1990 to
May 12, 2022, Kashmir, as well as her religious-minority, commonly known as
Kashmiri Pandits (KPs) have gone through some turbulent changes.
For the KPs, May 12, 2022
will be another black day. It was the day when militants killed Kashmiri Pandit
Rahul Bhatt inside Tehsildar’s office in Chadoora area of central Kashmir’s
district Budgam, sending shockwaves across Jammu and Kashmir.
This was just the latest
such incident.
On June 2, two people – a
bank manager in south Kashmir and a brick kiln labourer in central Kashmir –
were killed and another labourer was injured. Since May 1, the killing of the
labourer was the ninth killing of a non-Kashmiri by unknown gunmen.
Earlier, on May 31, a
schoolteacher was shot dead in south Kashmir’s Kulgam district. She hailed from
Samba district of Jammu and Kashmir.
In May, two security
personnel and three civilians died in targeted killings.
In May, security forces had
14 ‘encounters’ in which 27 terrorists were neutralized. This is the highest
number of kills in a month this year.
The situation in Jammu and
Kashmir has clearly taken a sudden and violent turn for the worse, in contrast
to a recent statement made by Union Minister Jitendra Singh that Jammu and
Kashmir was fast returning to ‘normal’ as the decades-long terrorism was on its
last legs. Srinagar was declared 'terror-free' by police in August 2020, but
now there has been a swell in terror ranks, with missing local youth from the
Valley posing a major security challenge.
Security forces have pinned
the recent incidents on so-called ‘hybrid terrorists’ -- operatives who are not
on any terror lists but are radicalised enough to carry out a strike and then
slip back into routine life.
They claim that around 160
terrorists are active in the Valley, of which 90 are ‘foreign operatives’. The
number of hybrid terrorists may close to 50, as per media reports.
NSA Ajit Doval has,
predictably, blamed Pakistan for the spate of targeted killings in Kashmir.
Meanwhile, KPs are in a
state of churn. “Even after all these years, we have to see our loved ones
being killed. Kashmir is hell. This place is cursed for KPs,” Amit Koul said.
Soon after Rahul Bhatt was
killed, KPs across the Kashmir valley staged strong protests and demanded their
relocation outside the Kashmir valley.
“There are around 7000 KP
employees working under the PM’s scheme of 2012. Many have left while others
are waiting to leave. There are thousands more who want to leave but the Jammu
and Kashmir administration isn’t allowing them to leave as they don’t want
another migration of KPs. If they are allowed to leave, no employee will be
left here,” says Chunni Lal, chief of Hindu Welfare Society Kashmir (HWSK) which
was founded in 1999.
HWSK is working mostly for
those Pandits families who chose to stay back in Kashmir rather than joining
the exodus earlier.
“The government did nothing
for non-migrant KPs. There are scores of KP families who did not leave Kashmir
but migrated from rural to urban district centers. The government failed to
even rehabilitate them. We protested in 2015 in and around Lal Chowk but the
BJP government did nothing for us,” Lal adds.
Talking about Sheikhpora
camp in central Kashmir’s district Budgam, Lal says that the camp was actually
constructed only to accommodate non-migrant KPs by the Mufti Muhammad Sayeed.
“The camp can accommodate
around 4000 families. However, only 31 non-migrant families are living at the
Sheikhpora camp, which is sheer injustice to us. Rest of the accommodation was
given to KPs working under prime minister’s scheme of 2012,” he said.
Fear stalks Pandit families
One of the important
factors that is leading to the second migration of Kashmiri Pandits is fear
that has engulfed the minority community. “There is fear among all of us. We
are sitting ducks and soft targets,” Ashu Bhatt said.
Since 2019, Ashu has been working
under the prime minister’s package scheme as a teacher. He belongs to Habba
Kadal area of Srinagar and had migrated to Jammu following the breakout of
militancy in Kashmir.
“There are around 6000
employees recruited under the scheme. Around 3800 families have left. Others
are here only because either their parents are going under any medical
check-ups or their children have exams. I will leave Kashmir as soon as my
children's exams get over,” Ashu said.
“I have asked a few
contacts in Delhi and Mumbai to look for a job for me and my wife. We will
leave Kashmir for good now,” he added.
He said that the BJP-led
government at the Center has no roadmap for the people of Kashmir, leave alone
for Kashmiri Pandits. “Congress did have a soft corner for the people of
Kashmir. The BJP is only playing politics in our name. They are only using us
to garner votes,” Ashu said.
The killing of Rahul Bhatt
also started a fresh ‘migration’ of Kashmiri Pandits from the Kashmir valley.
Kashmiri Pandit Sangarash Samiti (KPSS) is the largest KP group, comprising of
those who stayed back during the 1990s. The group is headed by Sanjay Tickoo.
“Around 120 families,
working under Prime Minister’s Package scheme of 2012, have left the Kashmir
valley following the killing of Rahul Bhatt,” KPSS said.
It said that as the J&K
administration and the Centre had failed to provide security to Pandits, many
more families are planning to leave.
Published
by National Herald on Published: 04 June 2022, 8:17 PM