바카라Everyone has to die one day바카라. One shouldn바카라t fear death.바카라 God is the ultimate saviour.바카라 These words are not from a sermon to believers, but were spoken by Nizamudin Bhat, general secretary of the People바카라s Democratic Party (PDP), at an election meeting in South Kashmir on March 25. In the audience were around 300 party workers, almost everyone above 40 years of age. With no flags, festoons and banners, it looked like anything but an election crowd.
The workers had come to hear Mufti Tassaduq, the 45-year-old PDP candidate for the Anantnag Lok Sabha seat. Cinematographer-turned-politician Tassaduq is the only son of the late Mufti Mohammad Sayeed and brother of CM Mehbooba Mufti. Bhat바카라s 바카라inspirational바카라 words signalled the party바카라s apprehension of a low voter turnout on April 9 and April 12, when bypolls will be held in Anantnag and Srinagar parliamentary constituencies, respectively.
The fear isn바카라t unwarranted, indeed, as the separatists바카라 call for a poll boycott this time comes after several months of protests across the Valley since the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani on July 8 last year. In fact, on March 13, three days after the bypolls were announced, unidentified armed men killed a former sarpanch in Pulwama, after which panchayat members across the Valley declared they had nothing to do with any of the contesting parties. And on March 26, there was a huge funeral march following the killing of two local militants in Pulwama, indicating that any such incident could snowball into a big crisis, affecting voter turnout in the bypolls.
While the Anantnag seat has been vacant since Mehbooba was elected to the assembly and took over as CM in April 2016, there has been no Srinagar MP since Tariq Hamid Karra, who had defeated former CM Farooq Abdullah of the National Conference (NC) to win the seat in the 2014 general election, resigned on September 15, protesting the killing and blinding of unarmed civilians during clashes with government forces. Interestingly, Karra is now campaigning for Farooq, who is contesting from Srinagar as the candidate of the Congress-NC alliance.
With 80-plus deaths under its watch during last year바카라s protests, the PDP has clearly lost the edge it had over the NC in 2014 because of the 112 deaths in firing by government forces during protests in 2010, when Farooq바카라s party was in power. Mehbooba and her party colleagues are left with no choice but to canvass on the basis of the PDP-BJP Agenda of Alliance (AoA), trying to sell it to voters as their best bet. The AoA calls for dialogue with all stakeholders in the conflict and promises status quo on contentious issues such as Article 370.
On the other hand, given its own baggage of 2010, the NC has been wary of targeting the PDP over last year바카라s killings, but is keen to keep the focus on the 바카라unholy PDP-BJP alliance바카라. 바카라The outcome of the bypolls should send a terse message to the fascist forces that are overtly and covertly trying to establish their foothold through the PDP바카라바카라that is Farooq바카라s refrain almost every time he addresses his party workers. He is pitted against Nazir Ahmad Khan, 55, who joined the PDP less than a month ago and is nowhere close to his rival in political stature.
In Anantnag, Farooq바카라s son and former CM Omar Abdullah has been talking of a 바카라fascist threat바카라 while canvassing for the Congress-NC candidate Ghulam Ahmad Mir. The soft-spoken Tassaduq, however, has refused to bite the bait so far, preferring ecological issues over political conflict in his brief speeches at low-key election meetings, where his refrain is 바카라change in thinking바카라. He was also unfazed by reports that a section of PDP supporters, who had been taunting Omar for marrying a non-Muslim, were disheartened when Tassaduq바카라s nomination papers revealed he was married to a non-Muslim.
바카라Whosoever wants to see this state prosperous, whether he is from India or Pakistan, or even if he is from the NC, he is my friend,바카라 says Tassaduq. 바카라Kashmir is called the Switzerland of India. But just look around and you can see how the environment has been degraded. Why is the water we drink so dirty? When I talk about these matters, they ask me to talk about something big, something that would make it to the headlines. Why don바카라t these issues get space on the front pages?바카라
However, it is not that the Mufti scion is unaware about the situation in Kashmir. So, unlike PDP general secretary Bhat, Tassaduq tells his workers that their lives are more precious than their votes. 바카라It will be good if I win, but even if I lose, I will continue to work. But, first and foremost, you should safeguard your life,바카라 he said at an election meeting.


바카라Our worry is not the election, but what will follow it. That바카라s what we have to work for,바카라 says J&K finance minister Haseeb Drabu, who often accompanies Tassaduq during campaigning and insists their party will win hands down. 바카라If there will be repeat of last year, it will be the end of Kashmir. There will be no business, no hotels and no industries. And we will all die,바카라 Drabu told a gathering while campaigning at Awantipora in Pulwama district. There were barely any youngsters in the audience, comprising mostly the elderly, who listened to Drabu without reacting.
In fact, young faces have been conspicuously absent from all interactions with Tassaduq on the election trail so far. 바카라In South Kashmir, on one side is the PDP and on the other are the youngsters, who identify with the separatists. There is absolutely no mainstream opposition here바카라that is our crisis,바카라 says Waheed-ur-Rehman Parra, a 29-year-old PDP leader.
Parra believes the only State institutions that are talking to young Kashmiris are the police stations. Youngsters are frequently called for questioning by the police. 바카라This has to end,바카라 he says, arguing that support for separatism and militancy is radicalisation of a political, not religious, kind. In Pulwama, scores of young men have been called to police stations to explain their messages on WhatsApp groups, as the police insist that is how rumours about protests are being spread. While the police claim some of these groups are run from across the border, the youths call this harassment by the police and the army, which is pushing them towards militancy. 바카라It has become unbearable. They are leaving us with no alternative,바카라 a group of young men tell Outlook at Begam Bagh, where 16-year-old Aamir Nazir was killed during protests against an anti-militancy operation on March 10.
Despite the near-total absence of youth from the election process in Anantnag, the PDP expects a good turnout. People had come out to vote in large numbers even after the 2008 and 2010 agitations, so party leaders hope it will happen again. A decent turnout leading to a PDP win is perhaps the only way the Mehbooba government can salvage its image battered by criticism over the handling of protests. Victory in Anantnag, in particular바카라the constituency includes Kokernag where Burhan was killed last year바카라will most likely be projected as a referendum in favour of the government. Meanwhile, it is banking on Tassaduq바카라s ecology talk to work in a setting where political discourse has long revolved around Azadi, self-rule, autonomy and India-Pakistan dialogue.
By Naseer Ganai in Awantipora (Pulwama)