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Stone Tools In Modern History

There is now a problem bigger than militants on ­India바카라s hands: protests beyond the separatists바카라 control

Stone Tools In Modern History
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Broken bricks and stones strewn outside the main gate of Government Degree College in Pulwama are what remain of April 15바카라the day when the college witnessed a pitched battle between the students and government forces. And on April 17, students across the Valley took to the streets in solidarity with the Pulwama students바카라the slogans raised were mostly pro-azadi, with some pro-Pakistan ones thrown in바카라forcing the PDP-BJP state government to order the closing down of all educational institutions. All in all, it capped a season of unrest that saw practically the entire landscape rise up in protest, prompting many to ask: what next in Kashmir?

In Pulwama, according to students, it started with the police and paramilitary forces cordoning off and entering the campus, aided by int­ense teargas and PAVA shelling. (PAVA is pelargonic acid vanillyl amide, also called nonivamide and is extracted from chilli pepper. It severely irritates the eyes and the respiratory tract, affecting breathing temporarily. In just six months of 2016, more than 1.60 lakh teargas shells and PAVA grenades were used to quell protests.) Showing some used teargas shells they claim to have picked up from various spots on the campus, students say the forces raided the coll­ege to 바카라avenge바카라 the defiance shown by them three days earlier (April 12) when they had pelted stones at an Indian army vehicle while it was entering the campus. According to Prof Abdul Hameed, the principal who has been removed from his post since, the students saw the army vehicle바카라s entry as the beginning of a raid and hurled stones at it.

Aamir Hameed Bhat, an operation theatre assistant, and Tanveer Ahmad Wani, an ambulance driver, were eyewitnesses to what happened. 바카라I was not driving my ambulance into a college but a war zone,바카라 rec­alls Aamir, 26, at Pulwama바카라s district hospital, just a kilometre from the college. 바카라The police were firing teargas and PAVA shells, the boys were pelting stones, the girls crying in the classrooms and we brought around 64 students, including 40 girls, to the hospital in 25 rounds.바카라

As images of the injured girl students went viral, student protests erupted in every district of the Valley on April 17. At some colleges, especially in Srinagar, bes­ides azadi slogans, the students also hailed Burhan Wani, the Hizbul Mujahideen commander whose killing by government forces on July 8 last year had triggered mass protests across the Valley. The government바카라s attempts to quell the six-month-long agitation had left nearly 90 civilians dead and over 15,000 inj­ured. The slogans in the current spell of students바카라 agitation are an index of the unprecedented support for Kashmiri militants among the new gen­eration바카라a symbolic stance of solidarity, whose very scale sets it apart from the more conflicted responses possible earlier. But why are things different now?

Some clues to the nature of things came a day before the students took to the streets, when a shutdown was observed on Sunday across the Valley to condemn the killing of a young protester by the BSF on April 14 in Srinagar바카라s Batmaloo area. At Shopian town, around 60 km south of Srinagar, nearly every shop was closed and the tension was palpable. The PDP바카라s Shopian town president, advocate Owais Ahmad Lone, says the situation alarms him. 바카라Prime Minister Narendra Modi visits Kashmir and instead of ­talking about dialogue and reconciliation, he offers a choice: 바카라terrorism or tourism바카라. Such an approach won바카라t work with the new generation,바카라 says Lone. 바카라Most militants here are locals. Many youngsters, including one of my friends, joined militant organisations as they were fed up with harassment by the police. As everyone knows them, it is natural that people rush to encounter sites to save them from the forces. If the government is keen on peace in Kashmir, it should stop killing protesters and start a dialogue.바카라

Lone didn바카라t quit the PDP even after militants barged into the houses of a fellow party leader and the families of six policemen at Chewan, 20 km from Shopian, on April 14, forcing them to announce they would shun pro-India politics and leanings. Locals say ­policemen are being targeted as the Special Operations Group (SOG), a part of the J&K Police, plays a key role in a lot of ­anti-militancy operations.

As a security measure, policemen have been officially instructed to not visit their homes during the next two months. Just a month ago, J&K DGP S.P. Vaid had res­ponded to an incident where militants entered a police officer바카라s house in Shopian by warning militants: 바카라This is between the police and the militants. Families should not be brought into this conflict.바카라 It seems ideologically motivated, tech-savvy militants are getting the upper hand in the battle for minds, with social media becoming a major tool. Now, most militants operating in south Kashmir upload their pictures and videos on social networking sites to mobilise support and motivate other youngsters to join them바카라a trend that had started with Burhan Wani. The strategy is working. A typical incident happened on April 16 evening at Heff village near Shopian, where government forces had to call off an operation to capture a militant when a large number of people, mostly youth, rushed to the site. The militant managed to escape.

Giving a sense of the mood in south Kashmir, a protester tells Outlook that the infamous video clip of CRPF personnel being heckled at Budgam on April 9, the day of the Srinagar bypoll, was a 바카라disgrace바카라. 바카라The youngsters here would have snatched five guns from the CRPF and joined militant ranks,바카라 he says as others nod in agreement. They add that other video clips바카라of Kashmiri youngsters being beaten or a man being tied to a jeep by the army as a human shield against stone-pelting바카라would only incite more anger, even though they show nothing new as 바카라the forces have been doing all this since the 1990s바카라.

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Army Shield

A Kashmiri on poll day

Senior police officials in Srinagar admit the situation is grim, but are wary of comparisons with the 1990s. According to police records, there are no more than 250 militants across the Valley, of whom around 100 are in south Kashmir and most are locals. Since January 2016, 105 locals took up arms, including 30 this year. In sharp contrast, according to home ministry records, there were around 6,800 militants in 1996. Former militant commanders say the figure was closer to 10,000 in 1995. The number fell over the years, with 4,390 militants ­arrested and 1,332 killed in 1995, and 3,453 militants arrested and 1,332 killed in 1996. The highest number of militants바카라2,421바카라were killed in 2001. Eventually, the army described 2015 as a 바카라zero-infiltration year바카라. But by that time, the game was turning.

Top police officials say militants with guns are no big challenge compared to the 바카라directionless and headless바카라 protests that have become the order of the day, with even separatist leaders having little sway over the protesting youngsters. 바카라J&K Police is not the same it was in the 1990s. It can deal with gun-toting militants, but the protests are an issue,바카라 says a police official based in north Kashmir. Authorities in south Kashmir say the Election Commission took the right ­decision by postponing the Anantnag bypoll (earlier due on April 12) after large-scale protests and the death of eight people in firing around Budgam. This year, there have been 800 incidents of stone-pelting so far, leading to the death of 17 civilians in police firing.

According to police sources, militants adhering to competing ideologies are in the game바카라often against each other in their bid for popular support. On April 6, unidentified ­gunmen appeared in south Kashmir바카라s Karimabad village and actually warned the people against waving the Pakistan flag, ­j­ustifying Taliban바카라s 바카라war on the Pakistan government바카라. 바카라This war is for Shariat or shahadat ­(martyrdom)바카라. Anyone who waves the Pakistan flag will be our enemy,바카라 a militant said in a speech that was recorded and circulated on social media sites. The United Jehad Council, a PoK-based conglomerate of militant outfits, soon clarified that 바카라these gunmen who pretend to be militants don바카라t belong to any militant outfit바카라. But it바카라s a sign of a booming market for sympathies at any rate.

A section of police officials see the current protests as a response to the 바카라growing right-wing Hindu extremism in mainland India바카라 and 바카라loose talk바카라 by politicians such as BJP MP Subramanian Swamy, who suggested 바카라depopulating바카라 Kashmir as a solution to recurrent protests. A PDP leader attributes it to his party바카라s alliance with the BJP, which made 바카라people feel the PDP has betrayed them바카라.

A senior intelligence officer of J&K Police says protesters can be controlled without causalities, but it involves the risk of creating security arrangements that remind people of the 1990s. 바카라On April 13, when repolling was conducted in 38 booths of Srinagar constituency, there was only two per cent turnout but no vio­lence. We overwhelmed the area with the police and paramilitary forces. The sheer numbers frighten protesters and they run away,바카라 he says with a guffaw. 바카라If we adopt the same tactics elsewhere, the Valley will again look like the 1990s, full of bunkers and security forces.바카라 Crowd control has indeed become a challenge. 바카라Now, the question is how to avoid civilian causalities during anti-militancy operations and whether the army would agree to carry crowd-control weapons such as teargas and PAVA shells or pellet guns,바카라 says a police official in Srinagar.

With the traditional separatists being seen to have little control over the protests, veteran separatist leader Prof Abdul Gani Bhat concedes, 바카라We are in trouble. It can take any form.바카라 Citing the presence of China in PoK and its growing involvement in the region through the China Pakistan Economic Corridor, Bhat hopes sooner or later India will hold talks to address the issue. Political commentator Gowhar Geelani, though, believes a government led by PM Modi is unlikely to hold talks. 바카라The BJP government has decimated the mainstream pro-India regional parties, especially the PDP, with an eye on the 2019 general election, to appear more nationalistic,바카라 says Geelani. 바카라So much so, the National Conference (NC) is accusing the PDP of being the BJP바카라s creation.바카라

With the PDP allying with BJP even after fighting elections against it in 2014, the party is so demoralised today that it is wary of holding bypolls in its bastion in south Kashmir, which, until last year, had Mehbooba Mufti as MP. The PDP had perhaps expected a 바카라Vajpayee-like approach바카라 from Modi. In 2003, the then PM Atal Behari Vajpayee had travelled to Srinagar and called for talks with all political factions. 바카라Hum inn sabke saath insaniyat ke daayre mein baat karenge (We will talk to everyone within the framework of humanity),바카라 he had said. This unusual outreach by Vajpayee led to dialogue between the Hurriyat Confere­nce led by Mirwaiz Umer Far­ooq and the NDA government. There have been no such overtures this time. No wonder, since the coalition took shape in March 2015, the PDP, which espoused 바카라soft separatism바카라 once upon a time, has not even raised the slogan of 바카라self-rule바카라, but only asked for dialogue. And that too the BJP has spurned.

During his visit to the state on November 7, 2015, Modi made no mention of friendship with Pakistan or dialogue with separatists. Again, in Jammu on April 3 this year, in Mehbooba바카라s presence, the PM urged the youth of the Valley to choose between 바카라tourism and terrorism바카라, saying 바카라40 years of bloodshed바카라 has not done anyone any good.

The policy drift of the Congress consisted of sending interlocutors in times of crisis and then not acting on their recommendations. The BJP, by contrast, is even more hands-off. It won바카라t engage with eit­her the separatists or the pro-­India political forces바카라an approach that seems to have pushed the latter to the other ext­reme. For instance, NC spokesman Junaid Azim Mattu says, 바카라We will not accept the killing of protesters and the humiliation of Kashmiris such as tying a man to an army jeep. We will go for the kill now.바카라

With pro-India NC ready to 바카라go for the kill바카라, PDP discredited, the separatists clueless and the students out in the streets protesting, Kashmir is sitting on a powder keg. All it needs is a trigger, which could be another army vehicle trying to enter a campus.

By Naseer Ganai in Pulwama and Shopian

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