The pelters and the police. Thousands of stones later, the men in uniform may be on the same side with the boys in masks
BY TUSHA MITTAL IN SRINAGAR
BY THE time you read this, the life and death of 22- year-old Bilal Ahmed Sheikh would have become a mere statistic: Civilian No. 63 killed by the security forces since 11 June — the day another boy, 17-year-old Tufail, breathed his last, sparking an intifada-like uprising in Kashmir.
Not a single police or paramilitary officer has been arrested for civilian deaths. FIRs against “unknown persons” have been registered, except for one case in Sopore against the CRPF for unprovoked firing. A commission of inquiry is looking into the first 17 deaths. The home minister has admitted, “At least a dozen killings may have been unprovoked.”
It has been more than 24 hours since Habibullah Tiblu was brought to SKIMS hospital with two bullets inside him, but the operation room is not yet available — it is already handling hundreds of injuries from stone, pellet gun, teargas shell and bullet. No compensation has been paid to injured civilians. Twenty-six men in SHMS hospital have just been told that they will never see again. Zubaid Khan, a Class 12 student from Khanyar, is one. He had just stepped out of his home when a stone hurled by the CRPF smashed into his eye.
So far, 800 policemen have been paid compensation of Rs. 5,000 each for injuries. “I fell down after a stone hit my head, and needed five stitches,” says an injured deputy superintendent of police. “Yet I instructed my men not to fire.”
According to Srinagar SP(South) Irshad Ahmed, more than 400 stone-pelters are currently in jail. Civil rights groups put that number at 1,500 in the entire district. Rafiqa Begum is holding back the sobs as she stares at piles of ******* apples. On 20 August, she says, her 16-year-old son Omar Saleem was picked up while selling fruits in Rambagh. “He left school so he could support the family. If they keep him in jail, we will be destroyed,” she says.
There is no way yet to verify exactly how many of those arrested have been released or booked under the Public Safety Act (PSA) — and that is part of the chaos Kashmir has descended into.
And now, in an eerie flashback to the 1990s, the official crackdown has begun.
There is no way yet to verify exactly how many of those arrested have been released or booked under PSA — and that is part of the chaos in Kashmir
Around 3 pm on 19 August, a 500- strong contingent of security forces surrounded Bemina locality in south Srinagar. All the male residents were asked to assemble in the field outside the local mosque. “They behaved with us like the army earlier behaved with militants,” says Imtiaz Ahmed. The police identified 42 men as stone-pelters. “They randomly called out to anyone wearing good clothes and Nike shoes,” says Ahmed. “They said whoever wants azadi, we will burn their house down.”
Shameema Begum was at home when they barged into her house, smashed glass windows, pulled out her 60-year-old father and her husband Bashir Ahmad Lone. “Where is Brett Lee?” the police asked them raining lathis. “Give us Brett Lee and we will let you go,” they said.
That’s a nickname for Shameema Begum’s 11-year-old son Danish, a lean, fair boy who plays cricket and dreams of becoming Sachin Tendulkar. But for the forces, Danish is an active stone-pelter.
Of the 42 men picked up, seven are still in police custody. Danish’s father Bashir, a daily wager, is one of them. A few years ago, a fracture disabled Bashir’s right hand. “They will only release him in exchange for my son,” says Begum. Srinagar SP(South) Irshad Ahmad denies this. “Bashir is in custody because he is also a stonepelter and a top motivator,” he told TEHELKA.Begum says the police have declared a Rs. 1 lakh reward on Danish. And that Waseem, a barber from UP and Begum’s tenant, was offered money to reveal the boy’s whereabouts. “If we take him to the police,” Begum asks, “how do we know what they’ll do with him?” That’s why an 11-year-old boy is in hiding. If the crackdown continues, boys like him may not return overground.
Divided loyalties Local Kashmiri policemen identify with the azadi aspiration, but are trapped in jobs
Divided loyalties Local Kashmiri policemen identify with the azadi aspiration, but are trapped in jobs
If you mapped the cycle of violence, of how the funeral procession of two victims through Sumbal could lead to another death in 24 hours, of why 21-year-old Parvez lying in a hospital bed, his hand Parvez lying in a hospital bed, his hand split by a tear-gas shell, insists he will pelt stones even if that means being martyred, some frightening realities would emerge.
“The resentment is not against us, it is against the institution, the Government of India,” Senior Superintendent of Police Ashiq Bukhari told TEHELKA. “We are the visible face of that. The people violate and we react. Under Section 13 of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), even a peaceful protest with pro-freedom slogans cannot be allowed. The quantum of force is up to the officer on the ground. There is no rule book. Yes, he is human and could make a wrong decision. For that, there is a commission of inquiry.”
It is almost as if 63 people have been killed in 74 days to keep alive the floundering idea of State. It is in this context that stories of Kashmiris serving in the J&K police become poignant. They are on the frontlines of this battle between citizen and State, representing an idea of nationhood they may not believe in themselves. In conversations with policemen across Srinagar city, it becomes evident that for most “Hindustan ki wardi” (uniform) is a necessary evil, a source of livelihood in a state parched for jobs. There is a sense of being trapped between Kashmiri identity and allegiance to India, and almost every constable TEHELKA spoke to said he wouldn’t let his children join the police.
This is a relatively new trend. Until the mid-1990s, the local police were not involved in counter-insurgency operations. In 1993, the police rose in revolt against the army and senior police officials after a fellow policeman was tortured and killed in custody. The army stormed the police HQ with tanks. In 1994, a Special Operations Group was formed to assist the army in counter-insurgency, policemen from Jammu and Poonch were in a majority but now, more than ever before, the Kashmir policeman finds himself looked upon as an agent of India.
THE POLICE say the sense of alienation that began in the summer uprising of 2008 has peaked. Since the last two months, they fear going back to their villages as many have faced social boycott. Constables, sub-inspectors, and even officers of the rank of SHO, now carry private IDs — press, PDP, even Hurriyat — to escape being lynched.
TEHELKA has learnt from a credible police source that as of 19 August, 1,800 J&K policemen have applied for voluntary retirement. While it is not clear how many of them want to opt out due to the current situation, it is a sign of the growing anguish.
A week ago, a constable was leaving his post in civvies when the CRPF caught him. He was beaten for violating curfew even before he could show his police ID card. On the way back to his post, he was beaten by a mob for being in the police. “We belong neither here nor there,” he says. “We are serving the Indian forces like Indians did in the British army.”
Two weeks ago, Sheikh Rauf, an NGO worker, saw a CRPF soldier abusing Kashmiris. A police officer asked him to stop but he didn’t. Finally, the policeman got up and screamed, “I’ll shoot you with your own gun.”
So while the CRPF is supposed to aid the local police, the reverse is true. “We are better trained for this job than the CRPF, but because they are more in number, they do what they want,” says an SHO.
‘If they protest without destroying government property, then I am with them. I too want azadi,’ says head constable Mohammad Ramzan
This is leading to a strange dynamic on the ground. When head constable Mohammed Ramzan tried to stop the CRPF from firing, he says he was held by the neck and beaten. “I only allow myself to keep a lathi, a helmet and a shield,” he says. “I don’t keep a gun in hand, otherwise I might be compelled to fire. If they protest without destroying government property, then I am with them. I too want azadi.”
“I’m in the police but my brothers are pelting stones in my village,” says a constable from the Trar region. Last year, his brother was picked up from home, shown to be in possession of arms, booked under the PSA and jailed for six months. On a trip home last month, villagers began to pressurise him to leave the police.
“I’m worried that my family will become a target. I am considering resigning. They are alone in the village,” he says. “I am a Kashmiri. Writing my nationality as Indian is only an administrative compulsion. If I weren’t in uniform, I’d be pelting stones,” he says.