Anger boils over again in Kashmir

August 9, 2016

Violence is escalating in the Kashmir Valley, where the July 8 death of 22-year-old Burhan Wani, among several recent killings that the Indian government claims are related to "terrorism," sparked outrage among the people of the occupied region. The government of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi responded to the protests with brutal repression. Indian troops have fired on demonstrators and attacking a crowd gathered for Wani's last rites with tear gas. At least 40 people were killed after a week of protest, and more than 300 injured in military violence against Kashmiri demonstrators calling for an end to state repression.

There is long history of denying the right to self-determination to the people of Kashmir, with the Indian government using laws like the Armed Forces Special Powers Acts to criminalize dissent and crush resistance--today in the name of fighting the "war on terror."

The following statement from the Delhi Chapter of the New Socialist Initiative, published on July 16 at the Kafila website, provides valuable background information to the recent developments in Kashmir.

THE VALLEY of Kashmir is on the boil again. Forsaking the so-called normal routines of their lives, people are in the streets. Not just young men, but even children and women are out, challenging the military might of the Indian state. Any fear of the police and army appears to have been discarded. Police stations and even Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) camps have been attacked. The popular upsurge is energized by mass fury. Forty people have lost their lives in one week at the hands of the Indian security establishment. Hundreds of others have suffered serious eye and other injuries from presumably "non-lethal" pellets used by the police. While people are out confronting the police, paramilitary and army, the other organs of the Indian state in Kashmir, the elected government and its bureaucracy, elected members of the legislature, panchayats, etc. are in a rat hole, fearing public appearance. It is the people of Kashmir Valley alone versus the institutions of organized violence of the Indian state.

Taking to the streets to protest the occupation of Kashmir
Taking to the streets to protest the occupation of Kashmir (Kashmir Global)

WHILE THE immediate cause of popular anger is the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen militant Burhan Wani, reasons for this anger go much deeper and have a longer history. The stifling and repression of the Kashmiri people's right to self-determination stands at the root of this conflict. This repression has taken on extreme violent forms. For 25 years, the Kashmir Valley has been among the most militarized places in the world. More than half a million troops of Indian army and paramilitary forces have been stationed in the state and its border with Pakistan. Rashtriya Rifles [a counter-insurgency branch of the Indian Army] and CRPF camps dot the landscape. Highway checkpoints and random searches are part of everyday life. Thousands of men have disappeared, been picked up by security forces, thrown in the black hole of interrogation camps, often ending up in unmarked graves. The hated Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) gives Indian security forces legal cover to assault basic rights of Kashmiris to live a life of elementary dignity. If an average valley resident is alienated from the normal practices of the Indian state such as elections and its administrative initiatives, s/he harbors deep resentment against the presence of Indian security forces in their homeland. This resentment has erupted in mass protests again and again.

Each time it has been an action of the Indian state that has served as the spark. Protests in 2008 were in response to the state government's proposal to transfer land to the Amarnath Yatra Trust. In 2009, Kashmiris were protesting against the rape and murder of two women in Shopian. Protests in 2010 followed an Indian army unit killing three local men, and passing them off as infiltrators from across the border. The valley erupted once again in 2013 against the secret hanging of [supporter of Kashmir self-determination] Afzal Guru. Most shamefully the then-United Progressive Alliance government refused to hand over his body to his family.

Each time that panchayat or assembly elections are held without disruption, or instances of militancy-related violence drop, or a Kashmiri youth achieves a high position in Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) examinations, so-called mainstream India, its political establishment, media and intellectual class begin singing the raga of a "return to normalcy" in the valley. Election rallies, brokering of state largesse, administrative measures or personal success of a few individuals, however, cannot fill the chasm that separates Kashmiris from the political community that "mainstream" Indians call their nation. This chasm has been deepening and widening ever since the arrest of Sheikh Abdullah in 1953 by the Nehru government and the military-style occupation of the valley from 1991, and has become unbridgeable even in principle with the creeping Hindutvaisation of the Indian nation.

Citizens of India need to pay special attention to this latter process and its consequences for Kashmir. It is not uncommon to hear slogans like "doodh maangoge kheer denge, Kashmir maangoge cheer denge" ("We will give you creamy deserts if you ask for milk, we will cut you down if you ask for Kashmir") in mundane religious functions in northern India. Increasingly public and aggressive display of religiosity seen elsewhere in India, is most clearly manifest in the annual Amarnath yatra. The yatra, seen as a mark of rigorous and serious religious commitment earlier, is now taken to be an assertion of Indian supremacy over the valley. Emboldened by this state support, Hindutva organizations have started inventing new Hindu pilgrimages in the valley. Increasing Hindutva aggression against Kashmiris can also be seen in the fatal attack on a trucker from the valley by gau rakshaks in Udhampur in October last year. In other parts of India Kashmiri students have been attacked and/or expelled from universities for not being sufficiently "nationalist." Votaries of Hindutva see history, politics and social change in terms of the conflict between Hindus and Muslims. For them, India's control over Kashmir is a sign of victory of Hindus. As long as this control persists, no matter what price Kashmiris have to pay for it, they see no problem in Kashmir. This explains the utter lack of policy and strategy of the Modi government with regard to Kashmir and Pakistan. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's politics is based on false bravado, loud mouthing and theatrics. Peace in Kashmir, or with Pakistan, is none of its priorities.

The same day that Indian security forces killed Burhan Wani, the Indian Supreme Court gave its judgment on fake encounters and the use of AFSPA in Manipur. The court made clear that the excuse of breakdown of law and order does not permit the state to treat any of its citizens as an enemy, or its armed forces to harm or kill her/him with impunity. While it is unlikely that this judgment will have much impact on the ground in areas like Kashmir, the "North-East" or Central India (areas where Indian state is facing armed revolt against its rule), it does make a clear assertion about the content of citizenship in democracies, even under extreme circumstances of armed rebellion. Actions of Indian rulers in Kashmir and many other places make it clear that they have no hesitation in violating the Constitution of India itself. Thousands of fake encounters, attacks on women, forced displacements and other actions are proof that the Indian state is the most authoritarian, anti-democratic and violent force in the country.


WE AFFIRM our solidarity with the progressive and secular forces in Kashmir that have been striving to establish a plural and democratic Kashmir. No politics, even anti-oppression popular politics, can escape questions of democratic values and ethos. The expansion of the idea of democracy as the preferred human condition is largely the result of secular struggles, and political religious organization has little place in it. The primacy of any religion in politics, particularly nationalist politics, goes against not only non-believers and followers of other religions, as the recent history of a country like Pakistan, or the rise of Hindutva in India shows, but the violence and authoritarianism of political forces which use religion also attacks democratic rights of adherents of the so-called majority religion. The principle of self-determination forms part of the expansion of the idea of democracy, the possibility of its fulfillment denied by the prolonged occupation of this land by the might of the Indian State.

How the struggle for Kashmir's azadi [freedom] will evolve will be largely determined by Kashmiris themselves. The politics of the Indian state in the valley should be the prime concern of the rest of the Indians. When this state uses soldiers recruited from the economically deprived and socially oppressed peasant castes from the Indian mainland against the people of the valley, it tries to kill two birds with one stone. Anti-Pakistan jingoism of Indian politicians and media, and claims of Indian Army to have successfully neutralized Kashmiri militancy, or tired out its people of anti-India demonstrations, are no substitutes for freedom from internal oppressions of Indian society. Kashmir is the proof of violent authoritarianism and Machiavellian machinations of Indian rulers. If Indians want democracy even for their own sake, they must challenge what the Indian state is doing in Kashmir.

First published at Kafila.

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