Watch: More Kashmiri Pandits killed after abrogation of Article 370
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVWYospMYcY
By
Daanish Bin Nabi
“From 2010 to 2019, not a
single Kashmiri Pandit was killed by the militants in Kashmir. The killing of
KPs again has only started after the abrogation of special status of Jammu and
Kashmir,” a Kashmiri Pandit and peace activist Mohit Bhan told National Herald.
“Abrogation of special
status has not helped the Pandit community in any manner. It’s a myth that it
helped us.”
He said that Bollywood
flicks like Shikara and Kashmir Files only fuel more fire among the already
alienated communities in Kashmir. “Such projects are undertaken to get the vote
bank back on track. All those who were shouting their lungs out in the
cinema-halls, none of them were Kashmiri Pandits.”
“Though the depiction of
what was shown in the film was true, the politics over it and the way it was
used against another particular community was in bad taste,” Bhan said.
Asked about whether the
treatment meted to the minority in mainland India will have an impact on the
peace in the Kashmir valley, he said that it is the people of Kashmir who need
to show a way to the rest of India.
“In 1947, when India was
burning due to communal strife, Gandhiji asked the entire nation to look
towards Kashmir where not a single Pandit was killed. Once again, it is the
Kashmiris who need to show the Indians how to live with brotherhood and in
communal harmony. We (Kashmiris) have done once, we can do it again,” Bhan
said.
In a video interview to
National Herald, an irate Bhan says that if the Government cannot provide
security to Pandits and Sikhs in the Valley, who returned when employment was
provided as part of then Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh’s package deal, the
package should be withdrawn or Pandits relocated.
While a large number of
Kashmiri Muslims were also killed in the Valley by militants, he hoped that
Kashmir would set an example to the rest of the country. It is for the majority
community to come out and reassure the minorities of their security and
protection, he said and hoped that contrary to the rest of the country, in
Kashmir the majority community would stand by the minorities.
Bhan, who had left Kashmir
at the age of only 9, said that no solution to the question of Kashmiri Pandit
will be fruitful till all the concerned parties shun their political baggage.
“Any organization who wants to give the minority community justice, besides
other communities, should not have any political affiliation. Till politics is
involved, no dynamics of Kashmir issue will get resolved,” Bhan said.
Bhan left Kashmir in 1990
when he was barely nine years old, returning finally in July 2019 to his home
in Barbarshah area of Srinagar district. “In 2001, after attending a marriage
ceremony at my uncle’s place, I started thinking that I must return home,” he
said.
Mohit Bhan said that his
cousin brothers were killed by militants in early 1990s. “My grandmother died
of shock because of these killings,” he said. He left a lucrative corporate job
behind in the capital-city of New Delhi to be back among his family and
neighbours. “I had every luxury in Delhi but every luxury was futile without
your own home,” he said.
Published
by National Herald on Published: 24 May 2022, 9:00 AM