The strike called by top Hurriyat Conference leaders Syed Ali Geelani, Mirwaiz Umer Farooq and Yasin Malik for Tuesday, July 25, protesting the recent arrests by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and the Enforcement Directorate (ED) evoked a poor resÂponse in the Valley. Seven second-Ârung Hurriyat leaders, including Geelani바카라s son-in-law Altaf Ahmad Shah and Mirwaiz바카라s close aide Shahid-ul-ÂIslam, had been arrested by the NIA on July 24 and brought to Delhi as part of its terror-funding probe. The very next day, the ED also arrested senior separatist leader Shabir ÂAhmad Shah. AnaÂlysts in Kashmir warn against taking this as the Hurriyat바카라s obituary and predict that the ongÂoing crackdown can only push the separatists to harÂden their positions.
There are apprehensions that next in line would be the top rung, Geelani, Mirwaiz and Yasin, who came together after Burhan바카라s killing last year and have been issuing protest calendars, asking people to obsÂerve shutdowns and take out marches. DGP S.P. Vaid says only time would tell whether they will be arrÂested or not, but the people of Kashmir have a right to know who is responsible for bloodshed in the Valley.


Shabir Shah
Geelani has been under house arrest since 2010, barring a few small breaks. Mirwaiz too has been under house arrÂest repeatedly, while Yasin has often been detained in Srinagar바카라s Central Jail. Now the NIA claims it has evidence of the seven Hurriyat leaders using money routed from Pakistan through hawala channels to pay people for pelting stones at government forces during the protests that have rocked the Valley since Burhan바카라s killing on July 8 last year. With Altaf in their custody, the investigators could try to link his father-in-law Geelani with the funding of terrorist activities in case the government wants to slap terror-related charges on the top Hurriyat leaders.
Altaf, who married GeelÂani바카라s daughter in 1986, is also called Altaf 바카라Fantoosh바카라 after the name of the hosÂiery shop he runs in SriÂnagar바카라s Lal Chowk. A postgraduate from the University of Kashmir and former activist of the Jamaat-e-Islami바카라s student wing, he has been running the shop from long before the armed insurgency began in 1990, say police sources. He had campaigned for the Muslim United Front (MUF) in the infamous 1987 assembly election. The polls were alleged to be massively rigged to keep the number of MUF winners as low as possible. When the Hurriyat Conference was formed in 1993 as an amalgam of a wide range of political and civil society groups active in the Valley, Altaf became one of its key members. The police see him as an important leader with a say in policy decisions made by the Geelani-led section of the Hurriyat.
Shabir Shah, who heads the Democratic Freedom Party (DFP), a constituent of the Geelani-led Hurriyat, had earlier in July announced a posthumous title, 바카라Tamgha-e-Jurrat바카라 (Star of Courage), to slain Hizbul MujÂahideen commander Burhan Wani for his 바카라courage, steadfastness and immense contribution to the freedom movement of Jammu-Kashmir바카라. He also asked the people to remember Burhan바카라s birthplace Tral as Burhan Valley. Shabir Shah바카라s arrÂest on July 25 was in connection with a money-laundering case dating back to 2005. In August that year, the Delhi Police had arrested one Mohammed Aslam Wani and allegedly recovered Rs 63 lakh, of which Rs 50 lakh, it clai-med, was for Shabir Shah and Rs 10 lakh for the outlawed Jaish-e-Mohammed바카라s Srinagar area commander. The ED had earlier summoned him for questioning several times.
The PDP-led state government is yet to comment on the arrests as leaders of the ruling party seem to be in a wait-and-watch mode. 바카라The Centre has started handling the Hurriyat directly. Let us see how they do it,바카라 says a senior leader, who didn바카라t want to be identified.
According to a senior separatist leader, the arrests could be meant to pressurise separatists into accepting talks with the Centre under the Indian Constitution, which the BJP could then project as a major achievement when India goes to polls in 2019. 바카라In the Valley, there is a growing impression that the Hurriyat has been soft on various issues. The arrÂests will demolish this assumption and restore its credibility,바카라 he says.
The Hurriyat has been facing criticism after it took a moderate stance on the extension of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) to Jammu and Kashmir. Geelani had asked traders and others to 바카라concentrate on the core issue of Kashmir바카라 and avoid anything that may alter the discourse. The state government had then gone ahead and implemented GST.
The opposition National Conference (NC) had described Geelani바카라s statement as 바카라disingenuous and misleading바카라 and said, 바카라The deceptive posturing of GeeÂlani on GST is a design to subvert the cause of the people of Jammu and Kashmir and to bail out the present rulers of the state who are hell-bent upon trampling the aspirations of the people of J&K at the behest of the powers that be in New Delhi.바카라


Yasin Malik stopped from marching to the UN office in Srinagar
Geelani바카라s 바카라soft바카라 stance on GST, surely, did nothing to stop the Centre바카라s crackdown on the Hurriyat. Analysts who call the arrests ill-advised point out that south Kashmir, where thousands participate in the funerals of militants, has been on the boil regardless of whether the Hurriyat calls for a protest or not. In fact, with top Hurriyat leaders under house arrest most of the time, it is the militants who have filled the leadership vacuum on the ground, with some of them appearing at the funerals as well. New hardliners such as Zakir Musa have also come up, who are driven by a pan-Islamist ideology and reject the idea of the Kashmir conflict being a political rather than religious issue.
Police sources reveal a growing worry that efforts to push the Hurriyat out of circulation would bring them a tougher challenge바카라the new hardliners, whom the police don바카라t know well enough and whose plans they have little clue about. As the crux of separatist politics has been to push for talks over Kashmir as a political dispute and resolve it peacefully, the targeting of Hurriyat leaders could be read in the Valley as the Centre rejecting the very possibility of a peaceful resolution. There are fears this could help the new hardliners find popular support even as they run amok with their dream of establishing an Islamic State, a theme on which, of course, there can be no talks.
This is not the first time the Centre has attempted handling separatist leaders this way. In Sep-tember 1999, when Atal Behari VajÂpayee was the PM, 25 separatist leaders, incÂluding Geelani, Yasin, Abdul Gani Bhat, Mohammed Ashraf Sehari, Moulana Abbas Ansari and Javed Ahmad Mir were arrested and immediately shifted to Jodhpur jail in Rajasthan. 바카라I am sending them to a place where they will see no hope,바카라 the then J&K CM Farooq Abdullah had said, adding바카라for good measure바카라he would 바카라let them rot바카라 where 바카라nobody would be able to meet them바카라.
Most of the leaders had been arrested during an election boycott campaign in Handwara, north Kashmir. That was the first time since the formation of the Hurriyat that its leaders were jailed outside the state. In April 2000, they were shifted to Tihar Jail in Delhi and some were kept in a guest house in the capital awaiting their release. That바카라s when the government made its offer to talk with the Hurriyat, while insisting that it won바카라t talk with the militants until they 바카라eschew violence바카라.
Now, 17 years later, with another BJP-led government in power, a similar statement was made on Wednesday, July 26. MoS (Home) Hansraj Ahir said the Centre is open to dialogue with those who 바카라eschew violence바카라 and are willing to work 바카라within the framework of the Constitution바카라. In April 2002, the government had sent former civil servant Wajahat Habibullah to convince Geelani for a dialogue. Geelani didn바카라t relent and insisted on tripartite talks. This week, Habibullah was in Srinagar to attend a confÂerence, but refused to comment on the arrests. 바카라Ask those who arrested them why they have been arrested,바카라 he said. In 2003, when a section of separatist leaders led by Mirwaiz agreed to talks, Hurriyat was bifurcated into two factions, with Geelani leading the 바카라hardliners바카라.
In January 2004, the Mirwaiz-led moderates met the then deputy PM L.K. Advani in New Delhi. After the Congress returned to power, there were two rounds of talks with the then PM Manmohan Singh바카라on September 6, 2005, and May 3, 2006. There was no third round as the Hurriyat alleged that 바카라promises바카라 such as withdrawing the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act and release of political priÂsoners were not fulfilled.
Manmohan Singh, though, kept the channels of dialogue open. Yasin claims he met Manmohan in New Delhi in February 2006 in the presence of then home minister Shivraj Patil, national security advisor M.K. NarÂÂayanan, principal secretary to the PM T.K.A. Nair, media advÂisor ÂSanÂjaya Baru and diplomat S.K. Lambah. ÂAccorÂding to Malik, ÂManÂmohan Singh told him that the govÂernment was 바카라trying hard바카라 to resÂolve the KashÂmir issue and having a 바카라fruÂitful diaÂlogue바카라 with Pakistan too. Malik was allowed to visit the US, where he met political lobbyist Ghulam Nabi Fai and then Pakistan PM Showkat Aziz. 바카라The then ISI chief, Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, who later became the Pak army chief, was also present in the meeting. Everything was running smoothly as I arrived back in Delhi,바카라 Yasin recalls.
Widening the Kashmir dialogue beyÂond the Hurriyat, Manmohan Singh met People바카라s Conference leader and now lapsed dissident Sajjad Lone on January 15, 2006. Lone said after the one-hour meeting that the process should be institutionalised as it was a more civilised way to resolve the conflict than violence. Lone unsuccessfully contested the 2009 Lok Sabha polls and is now a minister in the PDP-BJP coalition government in J&K, from the BJP quota. Since that 2006 meeting with Lone, there has been no engagement with separatists at the highest level. The common response among locals to the recent arrÂests is that the Centre may be barking up the wrong tree. For all the allegations against them, the role of Hurriyat leaders in political mobilisation has declined in recent years, making way for young people and the militant leaders.
By Naseer Ganai in Srinagar