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      Kashmir:  
	  Struggling for Peace  
	  By Mushtaq A.  Jeelani 
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 13, 2010 
	     “Kashmir burns again as India responds to dissent with 
	  violence,” The Independent   As Muslims all across the globe are 
	  celebrating the holy month of Ramadan, the people of Kashmir are under 
	  siege. The Indian occupation forces have imposed round-the-clock curfews 
	  and severe restrictions on civilians’ movement; as a result they are 
	  unable to even pray in mosques or to have access to basic necessities of 
	  life, including hospitals. They have been living in a perpetual state of 
	  uncertainty, insecurity and helplessness.    Thousands of people, 
	  young and old, men and women, boys and girls, are defying curfews and out 
	  on the streets protesting against India’s rule and the occupation forces’ 
	  reign of terror to silence the people’s movement demanding an end to 
	  India’s occupation. More than 60 protesters, mainly young boys, have been 
	  killed and hundreds have been wounded, in less than two months, in pitched 
	  street battles between anti-occupation protesters attacking the troops 
	  with stones and chanting: “Go India, go back. We want freedom,” and the 
	  Indian occupation troops are using brute force against defenceless 
	  Kashmiris, e.g., live ammunition, crackdowns, surprised night raids, 
	  random arrests, severe beatings, humiliation of women, and other tactics 
	  to terrorise the population.     The New York Times reports from 
	  Srinagar on Friday August 20: “Paramilitary soldiers fired live ammunition 
	  to disperse anti-India protesters and wounded three people after residents 
	  accused troops of attacking their homes in India’s portion of Kashmir on 
	  Thursday (August 19). ‘They came to our homes, broke windows and trained 
	  their guns at us,’ said resident Mohammed Abdullah. ‘All of us came out 
	  and protested this aggressive and bullying act. But they fired on us.’ An 
	  8-year-old boy wounded last week in firing by troops in the southern town 
	  of Anantnag died in a hospital on Thursday (August 19), taking the death 
	  toll to 60 in the last two months of demonstrations and clashes between 
	  the Indian forces and Kashmiri people.”   Basic foods and fuel 
	  supplies are running low and the people have been confined to their 
	  houses, with schools and businesses shut. The Indian Express reported from 
	  Srinagar on Friday July 30: “With no letup in unrest in Kashmir where 
	  curfew was re-imposed… people in cities and towns are facing a tough time 
	  getting food and essential commodities including medicines for their 
	  families.” Volunteers have established blood donation camps, pooled rice 
	  and vegetables in community kitchens at various locations and supplied 
	  food to the people in need and affected by the siege and also to patients 
	  in hospitals.   The people of Kashmir are so tired of the status quo 
	  that they want to do whatever it takes to have a normal life. This is 
	  precisely the reason the entire population is in support of the ongoing 
	  protests against India’s occupation. Whether the Kashmiri people are being 
	  heard or not by the world community, India and Pakistan, the people of 
	  Indian-administered Kashmir have been making a point, clearly and loudly, 
	  every day for the past three years, more particularly for last two months 
	  that the status quo is no more acceptable.   “Kashmir burns again as 
	  India responds to dissent with violence,” wrote Andrew Buncombe for The 
	  Independent (UK) from Srinagar on Saturday, August 7: “The largest towns 
	  are packed with heavily-armed police and the hospital wards are full of 
	  young men with gunshot wounds… The dead include young men, teenagers and 
	  even a nine-year-old boy, reportedly beaten to death by the security 
	  forces after he tried to walk to the local shop... More people have taken 
	  to the streets – women and the middle classes among them – and protesters 
	  have seemingly been more ready to accept the police's bullets as the price 
	  for their struggle to break away from the Indian state… The police and 
	  paramilitary forces have responded with crushing force… ‘The police are 
	  firing at the head and the body, not the legs. This is against human 
	  rights,’ said one senior doctor, examining a CT scan image of Mr Nabi's 
	  brain. A female colleague, who had worked there [Sher-i-Kashmir Institute 
	  of Medical Sciences] for seven years, said the situation was worse than 
	  she had ever seen. Children and women were among the victims…’ Protests 
	  will go on, young people will throw stones, the police will kill people, 
	  there will be angry funerals that lead to more protests, more stones will 
	  be thrown, the police will shoot and kill more people. Kashmir's agony is 
	  set to continue.”   Since October 1989, the 700,000 strong Indian 
	  forces have killed more than 100,000 Kashmiris – many more scarred and 
	  wounded, to silence the people’s demand for justice, respect for human 
	  rights, freedom and the right of self-determination. They continue to 
	  carry out arbitrary detention, summary executions, custodial killings, 
	  extrajudicial executions, enforced disappearances, rape, sexual 
	  exploitation, torture and fake encounters. Generations of Kashmiris have 
	  grown up under the shadow of the gun; not a single family is unaffected; 
	  property worth hundreds of millions of dollars has been destroyed and the 
	  suffering and devastation continues unabated that has inflicted loss of 
	  life and destruction on an unprecedented scale, sadly drawing no 
	  significant attention from the international community.   The 
	  Harvard Law Record, published an article on January 12, 2010, authored by 
	  Anil Choudhary, India buries dissent in Kashmir: “Nearly 2,600 bodies have 
	  been discovered in single, unmarked graves and in mass graves throughout 
	  mountainous Indian-controlled Kashmir… This report is one of the most 
	  damning pieces of evidence of the ‘crime against humanity’ perpetrated by 
	  the Indian armed forces in their occupation of the disputed territory of 
	  Kashmir. The Indian occupation of Kashmir casts a dark shadow over India’s 
	  shining image as the largest democracy in the world. Indian democracy 
	  prides itself on freedom of speech and expression and the right of its 
	  people to dissent. But the manner in which the dissent of the Kashmiri 
	  population has been crushed illustrates that India still has a long way to 
	  go to be a real functional democracy…  The Indian state has, for 
	  decades, been suppressing the largely non-violent dissent of Kashmiri 
	  people against the militarization of Kashmir. The Indian state has used 
	  the divisive propaganda of militancy and religion as tools to suppress any 
	  kind of dissent against its forced occupation of the region. The Indian 
	  state has tried to keep not only the international community in the dark 
	  about its hostilities toward Kashmiris but also the local Indian 
	  population, by controlling media reports of the real situation on the 
	  ground in Indian occupied Kashmir...”   The voice that India has 
	  tried so forcefully to silence in Kashmir has massed into a loud thunder. 
	  Kashmir’s young generation that has helplessly watched the Indian forces’ 
	  brutality against innocent civilians for more than 20 years has suddenly 
	  discovered the power of mass protest, which has shocked the Indian 
	  government. Vancouver Sun August 18, Youth revolt in Kashmir surprises 
	  both India and Pakistan: “Indian police and soldiers are notorious for 
	  attempting to cover up their killing of innocent [Kashmiri] civilians by 
	  claiming the deaths occurred in an ‘encounter’ with criminals or 
	  militants. But the [June 11, 2010] Machhil encounter seems to have been 
	  one incident too many for young Kashmiris who have known nothing but 
	  heavy-handed Indian attempts at subjugation.”    The situation in 
	  Kashmir today is symptomatic of the larger malaise afflicting the Indian 
	  state, which is facing a crisis of credibility on multiple fronts. “This 
	  is the most serious challenge to central authority [government of India] I 
	  have seen in 20 years,” said Siddharth Varadarajan, strategic affairs 
	  editor of The Hindu newspaper. “And the government doesn’t have much of a 
	  clue how to resolve it.”   Lydia Polgreen writes for The New York 
	  Times August 18: “This [Kashmir] is a genuinely international dispute,” 
	  said Ramachandra Guha, a historian whose book, ‘India After Gandhi,’ 
	  details the messy process by which Kashmir became part of India after 
	  partition in 1947. ‘India has a case for its position, but it is not 
	  foolproof.’”    It is high time India realised the fact that control 
	  over a region alone does not mean sovereignty over a chunk of land. It is 
	  the people who make up a nation and if they are perpetually alienated, any 
	  territorial supremacy achieved through brute force alone can never 
	  guarantee long-term peace.   The perception that the Kashmir issue 
	  is a bilateral matter between India and Pakistan is unfounded. Kashmir is 
	  not a territorial or bilateral issue. It is about the future of 15 million 
	  people with their own history of independence; their own language and 
	  culture. This has been an explicit explanation for the failure to resolve 
	  the Kashmir issue through on-again and off-again bilateral dialogue for 
	  the past 63 years. The people of Kashmir have lost complete faith in the 
	  bilateral process of India and Pakistan and their ability to resolve the 
	  issue.    The conflict in Kashmir is a “political” and “human” 
	  tragedy and the world community, including India and Pakistan, have 
	  overlooked this critically important human dimension of the issue. 
	  Kashmiris’ demand is simple and in accordance with international law: 
	  implementation of the United Nations resolutions for a plebiscite to 
	  determine the future status of the disputed region in a peaceful and 
	  democratic way. Whatever the outcome, it will be impartial and binding for 
	  all three parties: the people of Kashmir, India and Pakistan.    The 
	  people of Kashmir are yearning for peace, justice, freedom and the right 
	  of self-determination. They want a just and dignified peace that 
	  guarantees total freedom from foreign occupation and alien domination. 
	  Their struggle to achieve that right of self-determination will not be 
	  extinguished until India and Pakistan accept its exercise by the people of 
	  Jammu and Kashmir.    The unprecedented sacrifices and 
	  suffering experienced by the people against this volte-face in terms of 
	  death and destruction, life and property, torture and persecution, rape 
	  and repression over the years, particularly during the past 21 years, is 
	  much too great to go unrewarded. The Kashmiri freedom struggle is now 
	  entering its twenty-second year with firm and unwavering courage and 
	  determination in the face of unspeakable suffering and injustices to 
	  achieve the right to self-determination. The ground reality is very 
	  encouraging as the people are determined to achieve freedom, therefore, 
	  the struggle is in full momentum and the demand for a UN supervised 
	  plebiscite is at an all-time high.   Moreover, it is important to 
	  note that the work of international relief organisations in Kashmir is 
	  almost non-existent; the only source of material relief to the victims of 
	  this brutal occupation is individuals’ support. Kashmiri-Canadian Council 
	  appreciates continued support of friends of Kashmir and urges everyone to 
	  come forward and actively help to find a peaceful solution to the 
	  longstanding issue.   Conscientious, informed and concerned friends 
	  of Kashmir throughout the world can play a vital role in the education 
	  process by interacting with their country’s parliamentarians and the 
	  media. In addition, they can write to the UN Secretary General, 
	  international and local NGOs, and call or write to their Prime Minister 
	  /President and Foreign Minister to voice their concern about systematic 
	  human rights abuses in Indian-administered Kashmir.   The cause for 
	  which the people of Kashmir are struggling is a just one, and deserves 
	  support from all those who cherish peace and justice. ▪    
	  Mushtaq A. Jeelani is executive director of Kashmiri‑Canadian 
	  Council, a non‑profit, Toronto‑based, non‑governmental organisation 
	  dedicated to promoting the Kashmiri cause, both within Canada and 
	  internationally. Email: 
	  mj@kashmiri‑cc.ca.  
	  
	  
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