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You are here: Home / Archives for Indian Army

Army admits to killing two teenagers in Kashmir by ‘mistake’

November 8, 2014 by Nasheman

Mother of one of the slain youths consoled at her Nowgam residence by relatives and neighbours. Photo: Faisal Khan

Mother of one of the slain youths consoled at her Nowgam residence by relatives and neighbours. Photo: Faisal Khan

Srinagar: The Indian Army took responsibility and apologised for the recent firing incident in Kashmir’s Budgam district in which two teenagers were killed and two other people were injured. Army men had fired at a Maruti car on Monday.

“Army fully takes responsibility for the civilian killings at Chattergam in Budgam district,” Lieutenant General D S Hooda, Army’s Northern Command chief said at a press conference on Friday.

Army said there will be a transparent probe into the firing incident.

“I assure that there will be a transparent probe in the firing incident,” he said.

Two youth – Faisal Yousuf, Mehraj-ud-din- were killed and two – Zahid Ayoub, Shakir Rehman – critically wounded when army men fired indiscriminately at a car these youth were traveling in. While one youth – Basim Amin- escaped unscathed from the car.

“See mistake has been done. Dos and don’ts of operating procedures are being constantly taught to troops. We will get to know about the incident fully once the probe is over,” Hooda said.

“We sincerely wish the incident should not have happened. Inquiry has been ordered. We have recorded testimony from 15 civilian and service witnesses. The testimonies are being examined. The inquiry will be completed within 10 days,” Hooda said.

He said that the Army shares the sorrow and grief of the families.

Following the outrage over the incident, army replaced 53 RR unit with 35 RR in Chattergam.

Army had earlier claimed that the car refused to stop at two check posts, the claim which was rejected by a government inquiry conducted after the incident.

Clashes and restrictions continue in the native place of these youth from last four days. All the youth are residents of Nowgam locality in Srinagar.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AFSPA, Basim Amin, Budgam, Chattergam, Faisal Yousuf, Indian Army, Jammu, Kashmir, Lieutenant General D S Hooda, Mehraj-ud-din, Omar Abdullah, Shakir Rehman, Zahid Ayoub

NHRC notice to defence ministry over Army killing of two teenage boys in Kashmir

November 7, 2014 by Nasheman

Hundreds join the funeral prayers of two youths killed in Army firing in Chattergam area of central Kashmir’s Budgam district late Monday evening. Photo: Faisal Khan

Hundreds join the funeral prayers of two youths killed in Army firing in Chattergam area of central Kashmir’s Budgam district late Monday evening. Photo: Faisal Khan

New Delhi: The National Human Rights Commission Wednesday issued notice to the defence ministry and the Jammu and Kashmir police over the killing of two youths in firing by the Army, said a statement.

Taking suo motu cognisance of the incident, the commission issued notice to the secretary, ministry of defence, and the superintendent of police of Budgam district, calling for a response within two weeks.

Two teenage boys – Faisal Yousuf and Mehrajuddin Dar – were killed when army men opened fire on their Maruti car on Nov 3. The slain youth hail from Nowgam area and were friends. Although an army statement said, “The youths were travelling in a car and as claimed by the Army, they did not pay heed to signals to stop at the barriers set up by the security forces,” a government inquiry into the killings has contradicted the claims made by them that the car in which the youths were travelling tried to “sped away” when asked to stop in Chattergam.

As per the inquiry report, five persons were travelling in the car and they were all residents of Nowgam. An eyewitness account recorded by the committee states that the Maruti 800 car was stopped by the Army naka party and it “skidded off the road and hit a pole on the road side”.

“In the meantime one of the detachment of the naka party fired upon the vehicle, resulting into death of Burhan alias Faisal and Mehraj-ud-Din,” the report says.

Two more youths were injured in the firing incident who have been identified as Shakir and Zahid.

Ishfaq Ahmad, quoting his brother, Zahid, told KNS news agency that their car skidded as a speeding load carrier was about to run over them.

“The driver tried to save us and in the process our car ran into an electric pole. All of a sudden, Army started firing,” he said.

The fifth, Basim, emerged unscathed in the attack and ran away from the spot.

Chief minister Omar Abdullah Monday said the victims have “no connection” with the insurgency in the region and his party has demanded revocation of AFSPA, a draconian legislation which provides immunity to government forces from prosecution in civil courts.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: AFSPA, Budgam, Chattergam, Indian Army, Jammu, Kashmir, National Human Rights Commission, NHRC, Omar Abdullah

Army man facing probe in madrasa boy burning case in Hyderabad commits suicide

November 4, 2014 by Nasheman

mehdipatnam garrison

Hyderabad: A soldier, who was being questioned in a case in which an 11-year-old boy was burnt alive, committed suicide here early Monday, police said.

Lance Naik Appala Raju shot himself with his service rifle at the army garrisson in Mehdipatnam area in the heart of the city.

Police and army officials said no suicide note was found.

“Probably, the jawan was under immense mental stress due to the ongoing interrogation. The army is fully cooperating with police and wants the truth to come out at the earliest,” said a defence statement.

The lance naik was reportedly grilled by a Special Investigation Team (SIT) in connection with the Oct 9 incident in which a boy was burnt alive allegedly by armymen.

The army said the soldier’s suicide should not be taken as an indication of his involvement in the case.

They said the soldier was one of the over 70 people being interrogated by police in the case.

The boy was found with serious burn injuries near the main gate of the garrison. He told a magistrate in his dying declaration that some armymen poured kerosene on him and set him ablaze.

Mustafa, a madrasa student and a resident of Siddiq Nagar abutting the garrison, died the next day.

Police registered a case of murder against unidentified armymen and an SIT was constituted a few days ago to probe the incident.

(IANS)

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Appala Raju, Army, Hyderabad, Indian Army, Lance Naik Appala Raju, Mehdipatnam, Suicide

Mustafa was sexually assaulted and burnt to death by two Military men at Mehdipatnam: Fact-Finding Report

October 17, 2014 by Nasheman

boy-burnt-by-armymen

Hyderabad: To know the fact behind the death of Sheikh Mustafauddin, the 11-year-old boy who was allegedly burnt alive by military men, at Mehdipatnam Garrison, Hyderabad one week ago, a Fact Finding Team comprising Kaneez Fathima, Adv. Gulam Rabbani, Adv. Ismail Khan (Civil Liberties Monitoring Committee), D. Kotesh & Gurram Seetaramulu (Research scholars, English and Foreign Languages University), D. Nagaraju, Sogra Begum (Activists), Tathagata Sengupta (Asst. Professor, HCU), Adv. Greeshma Rai, Kaveri Indira (Faculty Fellow, HCU), Arpita Kanjilal (Research Scholar, HCU) visited the family, friends and neighbours of the victim Shaik Mustafa, met the Investigating officer, Inspector S. Ravinder of Humayun Nagar Police station as well as tried to speak to the officers at Garrison. The fact finding team spoke to the father, paternal uncle, relatives, friends and neighbours of the victim to know the facts of the incident.Given below is the report of the team.

Fact-Finding Report

Siddiq Nagar

Siddiq Nagar is located inside the Military Garrison and this locality had two ways to reach the road, one led towards Retibowli and another led towards Mehdipatnam. But the military personnel built walls and closed the path and way towards Retibowli and the civilians are left with only one way i.e. from the gate of Garrison. So, in short Siddiq Nagar is located in the middle of the military area which is encircled by the military cantonment. According to locals there are 250 to 300 houses on 2.5 acres of land and there are 200 families living there since the period of Nizam i.e. more than 100 years. Various religious communities are the inhabitants of this locality where a Masjid and a Mallamma temple are also located. This area comes under the Nampally constituency and under the limits of Humayun Nagar police station.

Facts of the case

On 8th October 2014, an 11 year old boy named Shaik Mustafa was burnt to death by two military guards near the ‘Signal equipment tools’ area in the Garrison located beside Sarojini Devi eye hospital, Mehdipatnam. This boy is the resident of Siddiq Nagar which is located inside the Military garrison which is infact encircled by the Military cantonment.

Shaik Mustafa is the third son among four children of Shaik Muqee Uddin. They are three brothers and one sister. According to the father of the victim Mr. Shaik Muqeet Uddin, Mustafa had gone to afternoon Namaz and returned to home and again went out to play. Within minutes he came to know from the neighbours that his son is burnt by the military men. He along with his elder and younger son rushed to the spot and found his son burning in flames and Khader, Mustafa’s friend and others were trying to put off the flames by pouring water.

Once the flames were doused, he lifted Mustafa in his arms and ran to find an auto to take him to the hospital. Though an ambulance of the Army passed by, nobody stopped inspite of his pleadings. Finally they found an auto and took Mustafa to Olive hospital. Enroute, father kept asking his son, who did this to him, Mustafa was gasping for breath and was repeatedly asking for cold water but in between he recounted and told his father that two men in army uniform called him while he was playing and asked him to bring chocolates, cigarette and match box. The boy took the money went and bought these things from the shop. And when he came back to give them the same, they asked him to come inside the fencing area so the boy sneaked into the fencing, then they punched him on his face and his teeth were broken. Then one of them poured kerosene in his kurta, Mustafa released himself from their clutches and tried to run and the other military man flung a lighted match stick on him. Mustafa ran towards the gate with the flames and as the gate was closed he tried to escape from the gap at the bottom of the gate and started shouting for help saying ‘I am the son of Muqeet Uddin’.

A person named Khader witnessed Mustafa burning in flames and alerted other people while trying to put off the flames. Muqeet Uddin said that all this happened within 15-20 minutes of time.

The Fact-finding team talking to people.

Olive hospital doctors declared 92% burn injuries and asked to shift Mustafa to Osmania General Hospital (OGH). Mayor Majid Hussain arrived at OGH and again shifted to DRDL Apollo hospital for better treatment. While undergoing treatment at Apollo hospital Mustafa succumbed to burns on next day i.e. 9th October 2014. While in Osmania General Hospital XV additional chief magistrate A. Srinivas Kumar recorded his statement. Mr. Khader, aged 25-30 years, who witnessed Mustafa in flames, later gave a complaint in police station and 307 case was registered later altered to 302. MLA Jaffer Hussain, was at the place till the body was shifted to grave yard.

Locals’ grievances

According to Shaik Moinuddin, paternal uncle of the victim and the local people living in Siddiq Nagar said that before 1995 the area was open without any fencing or gate. Later it was fenced and the gate was fixed in 1995. Just 2-3 years back fence was removed and wall built surrounding the whole area including the road which paved way towards Retibowli and the civilians are left with a single entrance from the Garrison gate which is besides Sarojini Devi eye hospital and opposite to the airport fly over. The civilians are given passes which they have to show each time they leave or enter the gate and renew them every year. No other person including relatives and friends are allowed to enter this locality. The relatives have to show original Aadhar cards and the present condition is that when a relative wants to visit they have to make call and ask their relative to come to the gate and them accompany them to their house. The locals also said that since two years the military personnel are troubling a lot especially to the lady residents. When the women come or go out they are asked to show their faces by removing their burqa or even if they are with their brothers, fathers or husbands they are forced to show their faces and asked where they are going or where they are coming from. This harassment has increased since a month they said.

Mr. Krishna who is a BSNL employee and resident of Siddiq Nagar said that they are living here since 100 years. At the time of Bonalu celebrations recently, they were not allowed to celebrate the festival. 2-3 vans of military men came and surrounded them as if it is a war zone. They threatened the civilians to leave the Mallamma temple or face dire consequences and then this temple is also fenced and no one is allowed to go to that temple.

The locals also said that during the time of Chandrababu Naidu in the year 1999 the army personnel destroyed the Rythu Bazar (farmers’ vegetable market) and bulldozed the entire market causing severe loss to the farmers. The locals also said that two years back the then AP government had assured that they would be accommodated in other area by building G+3 flats, but the locals demanded that they should be given independent houses same as they have in possession. But the government has done nothing yet. Few years back, the then collector also tried to evict them in the pretext of shifting the Mehdipatnam Rythu Bazar inside the garrison, but the alternative accommodation site they offered was very far outside the city. Recently Minister Padma Rao came and assured them of giving land and homes in the city area itself. The residents of Siddiq Nagar are so vexed up by the harassment of military personnel that they do not want to live there and now after this incident they feel that they have threat to their lives as well as threat to the security of their women and children.

As we were leaving the premises of Sarojini Eye Hospital, we overheard two individuals talk about how the residents of the Siddiq Nagar were hiding the truth. On approaching them, they refused to talk with women around. Hence, the women moved away and male members of the team had a conversation with them. Under conditions of anonymity, they mentioned that the boy was lured with chocolate, sexually assaulted and then set on fire, so that he wouldn’t get to tell anyone about the sexual violence, and also to ensure that the evidence of the assault was destroyed. The family members and other members of the Siddiq Nagar are not willing to share this information out of the fear of public shame and violence from the army authorities. They also mentioned that they have heard from people that the duty register, containing the details of who was there in duty then at the particular gate, has been tampered with to shield the perpetrators.

Visit to the police station

After talking to the father, uncle and other people of the locality, the fact finding team went to the Humayun Nagar police station where this case is registered and met the investigating officer, Inspector S. Ravinder. According to the officer, this incident of burning Shaik Mustafa took place on 8th October 2014. At around 2.30 pm they came to know about the incident and they rushed to the spot and found Mustafa with burn injuries at “Signal Equipment Tools” area in the Garrison. The victim was shifted to Olive hospital, then to Osmania general hospital. From there he was shifted to DRDL Apollo hospital for further treatment. While undergoing treatment at Apollo hospital, he succumbed to burn injuries at 8.50 pm on 9th October 2014.

In his dying declaration, Mustafa told in front of Magistrate that two military personnel poured kerosene on him and lit the fire (which correlates with the version by the father). On asking by the team whether the victim disclosed any name(s), Inspector said that he did not disclose any name(s). Officer also said that according to the boy’s statement, the military men asked him to bring 2 match boxes and 2 chocolates from the small kirana provision shop inside the garrison.

The team members also asked the officer whether any clue has been found in these four days, whether the military people are cooperating with the police men in investigation and what all measures are being taken to solve case. The officer said that till now no clue has been found but the burden of responsibility lies with the military officers. 15-20 teams are formed categorized and these in groups form are approaching various people for investigation. Teams such as forensic, DCP, CCS, SIT, civil police, ACP etc. are formed to track the culprits. The officer also said, close to the play ground from where Mustafa was last known to be present there are many Equipment Stores manned by different individuals (Army employees) at different time periods. He said there are no surveillance cameras which lead to the area of the crime; no guards man the exact location where the attack took place. He further said, there are 53 categories in which different workers/officials fall into right from Dhobi to Officers. The police are scrutinizing all these lists and those who were working at the time of occurrence of the crime.

On asking what all was found at the offence area, he said chocolate wrappers, kerosene bottle, burnt kurta of Mustafa and many other things were found and all these things are in the custody of forensic experts. He also said that a case of 302 read with 34 IPC is registered. The team members asked him whether any complaints have been received against the military personnel in the past by the civilians. The officer said this area was handed over to the military around 1962 but the civilians are residing there since 100 years. There are almost 200 families living in Siddiq Nagar. There are no complaints at this police station against the military personnel but there are many issues in the past including vacating that land, but no recorded complaints. One of the team member asked whether there is any doubt of sodomy as is heard by some of us. On this the officer replied that they are looking at all the angles including this issue.

The officer also mentioned that the officials from the Army have been cooperative but he mentioned that the Army has its jurisdiction and sway over the whole area, and they have the “Kashmir mindset”. Later we also noted that the battalion posted there in the Garrison is the Jammu and Kashmir regiment. He also mentioned that a special taskforce has been appointed by the Commissioner and the taskforce was also looking into the matter along with his team.
The investigating officer, Mr. Ravinder seemed to be confident about the Army’s cooperation in the investigation. But he was clear that the Army’s permission is required to interrogate officials working with the Army. He seemed to be of the opinion that the Army is in all possibility having an internal enquiry into the incident. When asked what if the Army issues a statement saying none of their officials committed the said crime which would be a hindrance to the investigation, Ravinder repeatedly said that the word of the Police will be the final word and even if their findings are contrary to the Army’s, their findings will take precedence. What we fail to understand is how the Police will have access to any of the officials under the payrolls of the Army as we are well aware that to do so, prior permission of the Army is mandatory. Inspector Ravinder seemed confident that the police will soon have a breakthrough as this is a ‘sensitive case’ but the team is concerned about the possibility of the perpetrators getting away with the crime.

Visit to the Garrison

After this, the fact finding team went to Garrison, but the guard did not allow the team to go inside and asked us to bring written permission from the Andhra sub post. We insisted to speak to any officer at Garrison so the guard asked all of us to go out and only one person can stay and speak and he called the officer over phone but the officer did not wish to speak to us. During that time a relative of someone of Siddiq Nagar had come and wanted to go inside, the guard spoke to him very rashly and asked him to call the person to whose house he want to go and then after he comes he can go with them inside, he said. We had already known through our sources that the military people are not allowing anyone to visit the victim’s family, so we had called the father and other people outside, spoke to them and got the details.

Demands from the victim’s family

The family of Mustafa demand that justice should be done to their son, the two military men should be punished for the heinous crime. They also have strong opinion that the military washer man Allappa knows everything about the incident and might be the eye witness of the military men burning Mustafa, as the kerosene might have been taken from the room as it is used by the washer man to burn the coal for ironing the clothes. The locals demand the government to either shift the military from that area or allot houses to these people in any other part of the city as they have regular threat from the military personnel not only to them but to their women and children as well.

Findings

The following are the findings by the fact finding team after visiting the place and speaking to various people including the victim’s family:

  1. This case is purely a case of sexual assault and murder of an 11-year old boy Shaik Musatafa by two military persons.
  2. The team has found that the harassment of the local civilians by the military personnel is not a new thing. It is going on since few years and now since six months the harassment has increased.
  3. This harassment is also a conspiracy by the military personnel to evacuate the local civilians from their place and occupy even that piece of land held by the civilians.
  4. Almost lot of land has been occupied by the military personnel including the childrens’ playground, the Mallamma temple and closed the route which paved way towards Retibowli.
  5. It is commonly known to everyone that civilians are attacked in such manner since many years. Therefore, the land to military personnel should be allotted at the outskirts of the city not in the heart of the city.
  6. After speaking to the investigation officer it is very much clear that police is not given autonomous authority to investigate this case. They are dependent completely on the military personnel.
  7. There is harmonious relation among the communities living in the Siddiq Nagar area.
  8. It seems that the military has no moral values. Even if they had minimum moral values they would have not committed such heinous crime.

Recommendations and Demands

The fact finding team recommends and demands the following:

  1. As it is purely a case of sodomy and murder by the military men the commander in chief of the army should immediately intervene into the matter and take serious steps to provide justice to Mustafa.
  2. The commander in chief should immediately resign as a mark of moral responsibility till the enquiry is done, criminals punished and justice done to Mustafa and his family.
  3. The military officers very well know who the culprits are, but they are shielding those criminals. The military officers should immediately court marshal those criminals and restore moral values in the army personnel.
  4. Investigation officer should be given complete autonomy to handle this case and bring out the facts before the people.
  5. All the parties who are interested in investigation such as civil bodies, police personnel etc. should be allowed to move freely into the cantonment area for the purpose of investigation.
  6. As there are many political forces involved in this matter Investigation should be done and completed by the CBI in a very short period and the report should be presented before the people as soon as possible so that justice is done to Mustafa.
  7. The local civilians should be given complete protection by the government as they have threat by the military personnel.
  8. The unrestrained army personnel should be put in control.
  9. As it is a civil matter the state government should take the military cantonment into their possession till the matter is solved.
  10. The military cantonments should be withdrawn from the areas where they are in the city limits.
  11. A family member of the deceased should be given a government employment immediately and rupees twenty lakhs should be given to the family in the form of compensation.

Conclusion

After going through all the facts and statements of various people, it is evident that this is purely a case of sodomy by two military men with a boy of 11 years old. It is sheer a matter of shame for the whole military personnel. The immorality and shamelessness among the army is growing to such an extent that they are becoming a burden for the Indian government and the most unreliable and mistrustful for the civil society. Though they are recruited for the purpose of the security and protection of the Indian citizens, they are turning to be the enemies of the civilians. They have become threat for the civilians.

This is not the first kind of incident; there are many more serious crimes by the military personnel in the cantonment areas where most of the cases go unreported and unseen. Just two months back a minor girl was raped and killed by the army of Secunderabad cantonment. The army regiments at the borders of the country and in Jammu & Kashmir as well north-east states suspect every single civilian and behave in a violent way with them. The same mindset is seen in the military personnel in Hyderabad and Secunderabad cantonments. As there are many political forces involved not only in this case but also in the larger issues that are happening in various cantonments in the twin cities of Hyderabad and Secunderabad, there is dire need for CBI inquiry into this case, which should be completed in a very short period of time and made public so that the further harassment and assaults by the military personnel are controlled.

It is high time that the Indian government at the larger level and the Telangana government at the state level should intervene in this matter and take serious steps in withdrawing the military cantonments from Hyderabad and Secunderabad areas and shift them at the outskirts of the cities. In the past when the lands were allotted for the military cantonments, the civilian population of the cities was very much less. But now the population of the twin cities i.e. Hyderabad and Secunderabad has increased tremendously. So these military cantonments should not be continued in the city areas. Therefore, these cantonments should be shifted immediately to the outskirts of the cities.

If at all these assaults and harassment by the military personnel continue with the civilians as is presently witnessed in Mehdipatnam cantonment and Secunderabad cantonment, people will lose faith in the military personnel and will have no respect towards them. Therefore, not only Civil Liberties Monitoring Committee but all the civilians of the twin cities strongly feel that the cantonments be shifted immediately to the outskirts of the twin cities and save the citizens from the harassment and assault by the military personnel.

Kaneez Fathima
Jt. Secretary, CLMC

Filed Under: India, Indian Muslims Tagged With: Army, Hyderabad, Indian Army, Madrasa, Mehdipatnam

Walls instead of Bridges: Kashmir's chance destroyed by Media

October 13, 2014 by Nasheman

Kashmir-flood

– by Special Correspondent, Nasheman

Srinagar: On 7th September, 2014 Kashmir witnessed the worst disaster of the century when the summer capital of Jammu & Kashmir got submerged. Rajbagh, Shivpura, Indra Nagar, Jawahar Nagar and Bemina were the worst hit. Water levels rose upto 18 feet in these areas. People were shocked and unable to understand how to save their life. But as we say life has its own ways, people started marching towards these areas and tried to rescue people and bring them out of these submerged houses.

In the state government, except the Chief Minister & DGP everyone else was trying to save himself and his family. I reached Srinagar airport on 5th September and on the same day on directions of Home Ministry two NDRF teams had reached Srinagar airport. Mubashir Bukhari, Dy. SP JK police was briefing them about the situation. NDRF was clueless about the topography of the area and in Kashmir we still don’t have Google maps updated so you can understand how tough it would have been for this police officer to brief them. But anyhow NDRF teams were sent to the destination.

On 7th September when water started entering Srinagar city, locals, NDRF teams and some J&K policemen started rescue operation. On the morning of 8th September, we saw big fleet of helicopters of IAF pressed in the rescue operation. Whenever there is any natural calamity, I have never seen that rescue operations are done by government only, in most of the cases, during rescue operation locals do more work than government machinery and same happened in Kashmir..

Air Force, Army did tremendous job in rescuing people. I Saw army without any hesitation taking people in their vehicles and people also getting into these vehicles without any hesitation. This was the Kashmir which I had seen in my childhood when army and public were friends, though after 1990 everything changed. Till 9th of September everything was going on peacefully but on 10th I again saw anti army voices raising especially in non flood hit areas. I was wondering what happened suddenly, why are people against the army? Why are people saying army is rescuing only non-Kashmiris? Then I realised the battery of journalists who had come with IAF fleet were just showing rescue operation of army and not of the locals. Unfortunately, these reporters were just showing the interviews of only those people who were from outside, this reporting gave the impression that government is only trying to rescue non Kashmiris which was not true. Though few channels did commendable job by taking messages of people stranded in the flood to their families but all these efforts were wasted by some editors for reasons well known to them. This was the time when media could have played the constructive role and tried to narrow down the gap between localities and Army.

Worst was when few channels started playing visuals of stone pelting on security forces in 2010 and rescue operation. I didn’t understand what they were trying to tell people of Kashmir by showing these pictures. Didn’t the media spoil the work done by army and IAF and didn’t this reportage allow people to raise questions.

There were lot of stories which these journalists could have done. Boat owners taking thousands for few kilometers. Thieves trying to sneak in these submerged houses and some heroic jobs of local people.

I am a journalist and fortunately or unfortunately i was in Kashmir during these floods and witnessed as how some media reportage not only spoilt the work done by government but widened the gap between Kashmiris and the government.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Army, Floods, India, Indian Army, Jammu, Kashmir, Media, Natural Disaster, Pakistan, Srinagar

"Centre failed to mobilise the country for rehabilitation of Kashmir valley": CPA Fact finding team

October 11, 2014 by Nasheman

Srinagar_flood

The Centre for Policy Analysis organised a visit (September 27-29, 2014) to Jammu and Kashmir with the purpose of bringing out an interim report on the flood situation in the state. The team comprised Tushar Gandhi, Anand Sahay and Seema Mustafa, with Bula Devi, coordinating the visit. 

The team visited Srinagar that was worst affected in the Valley along with South Kashmir districts. The team visited the affected areas and spoke to residents, shopkeepers, the youth who had organised relief operations and journalists including the Editor of Rising Kashmir Shujaat Bukhari who has also taken up rescue and relief operations. The team also met the Chief Secretary and top officials of the state government as well as Congress party’s Ghulam Nabi Azad and Salman Soz, and Peoples Democratic Party leaders Mehbooba Mufti and Naeem Akhtar, Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umer Farooq, the Jamaat e Islami and its top leaders including the Amir and many others.

Serious trouble has many dimensions. In Kashmir, after the recent floods — the worst not only in the last one hundred years but probably of all times — which devastated not just the habitation of lakhs of people but also every aspect of the economy and an entire way of life, perhaps the most striking feature is the absence of any effort of mobilisation of the national will by the state government and the Centre.The government of Chief Minister Omar Abdullah was caught unawares by nature’s fury and, as might well have happened in any state in India, its inefficiencies and incapacities to rush in relief or rehabilitation (after its initial failure to rescue) even several days after the flood waters rose up to 40 feet in some parts of the city (such as Ram Munshi Bagh) have left the people angry and disillusioned.

The three-member CPA team visiting the Kashmir Valley from September 27-29 heard elaborations of this all over Srinagar, from senior mainstream politicians and important separatist leaders, as well as ordinary people at relief camps and on the streets.

Hardly any less striking has been the failure of the Union government to provide moral support and material assistance on the scale required. High representatives of the Union government made pro forma flying visits. Exactly one month after large parts of Srinagar were submerged on September 7, 2014, following four days of frighteningly heavy and unseasonal rains, it is reasonable to assert that the Centre has failed to mobilise the country behind the gargantuan task of rehabilitation of Kashmir valley.

Immediately after much of the valley was marooned, Prime Minister Narendra Modi used appropriate words to describe the catastrophe.

He called it a “national disaster”. A month after, those words seem empty.There has been no move through radio and television to rally the nation behind Kashmir. Red tape has not been cut to rush finances to the beleaguered state under special dispensations or through special purpose vehicles devised to meet an unforeseen and extraordinary situation, which has negatively impacted lakhs of lives in a state which is routinely described as “sensitive” on account of its geostrategic position. Perhaps this is why the Prime Minister referred to the issue of relief for disaster-hit Kashmir in his speech in the United Nations at the end of September, but his words do not seem to have travelled beyond the four walls of the General Assembly.

In contrast, the promptness of voluntary aid — although this is bound to be a drop in the ocean in relation to the scale of the calamity — from all corners of India has been a touching demonstration of what the human heart is capable of and what individual will can achieve. In Srinagar, the CPA group came scores of relief teams from different parts of the country engaged in offering medical assistance to people at risk of contracting deadly diseases if not attended to with speed.

It is our heartfelt wish that political and social activists from all parts of India visit the Kashmir valley and the hill terrain of Jammu in Rajouri and Poonch to see how their fellow-citizens have suffered, and find ways to help them generously and with the utmost diligence.The state government is not sure even at this stage what exactly happened on the September 7 and 8, 2014 when much of Srinagar –the seat of government, the centres of business, trade and industry, and the tourist spots in Jammu and Kashmir’s capital city –capsized, parts of it such as Ram Munshi Bagh going under 40 feet of water.

The command and control locations and apparatus have not been struck by disaster in any other state capital before. This compounded the Kashmir tragedy in the wake of rain and flood and made the task of rescue, relief and rehabilitation incomparably complex.

The state Chief Secretary, Mr Iqbal Khandey and his senior officials told the CPA fact-finding team that a technical assessment will have to be made about what exactly happened. The Jhelum river snakes its way through the ancient city of Srinagar some 60 kilometres after it takes its rise in South Kashmir. Four days of blinding rain had caused the river to swell. It breached its banks at Kandizal in South Kashmir’s Pulwama district, some 15 kilometres from Srinagar.

This led to the initial assessment that Srinagar might be saved from what looked like certain disaster, the speed at which the water level was rising, as the water might now be discharged away from densely inhabited areas. But this was not to be.The senior officials said the flood refill channel running approximately parallel to the Jhelum in Srinagar had been built in 1902 on the assumption that the river, when in spate, would not be carrying more than 80,000 cusecs of water while passing through Srinagar, and some 35,000 cusecs of this would be discharged into the flood refill channel if need arose. The assumption had held for 112 years. Over the years, however, the flood channel has not been tested. Indeed, housing has come up on and around it and this was bound to impede water flow in an emergency. That emergency struck in the first week of September.

This year, say officials, the gauge stations, which are monitored hourly, went under. They estimate that 1,20,000 cusecs of water was coursing through Srinagar on September 7 and 8, the equivalent of the flow of three Jhelums in Srinagar. How this came to be is wholly unclear, especially after the breaching of the Jhelum banks at Kandizal. To explain this, the top officials say there might have been multiple cloud bursts on the night of September 6 around Srinagar, before the river enters the big city.

This is a completely untested hypothesis and may be a convenient and contrived explanation. Therefore, a thorough inquiry is in order.

In slightly more specific terms the team has attempted to segregate the areas of concern into the following, to give a more specific understanding of the situation on the ground today.

The Floods

Water levels rose alarmingly with the rains and flood waters rising to submerge districts in South Kashmir. The State government and the authorities were caught completely off guard even though the team was told by concerned officials that the water levels of the rivers were monitored almost hourly. However, there seems to have been no effort to warn the people in South Kashmir, and to evacuate the villages, many of them are reported to have been washed away by the torrential waters. People were rescued by the Army and by volunteers from their homes after days, with any number of stories narrated to the team members about the trauma and the suffering of the local residents who barely managed to escape with their lives.

Despite this, there seemed to be little understanding of how the South Kashmir deluge would move to impact on other parts of the State. Some effort — minimalist in our view — was made by the State government to ask the people to evacuate their homes. The radio and the loudspeakers on mosques were used as the communication system for this by the State government. However, no one not even the authorities took the warnings seriously with the government making no effort to evacuate the residents or even itself for that matter. The warnings thus remained at best a token response to the South Kashmir situation where the waters had risen dramatically and the rivers had already started flowing far over the danger mark. The State government in the little time it had made no effort to requisition boats, life jackets and prepare for rescue operations. An indication of the non preparedness comes from the fact that the government that is adept at moving its darbar to Jammu in the winter months, did not even lift a finger to move itself on to safe, dry land where it could remain in contact with the people. Despite the fact that floods hit the State every now and again — of course never as severe as this — there seems to be no disaster management protocol in place.

The result is that when the rivers breached the bands, and came rushing into the city everyone was caught unawares. Resident after resident told the team of how the waters moved from puddles outside on the roads to the second floor of houses with dramatic speed. One young man said that he was running down the street to his house with the waters literally roaring behind him as he ran.

Within hours Srinagar was literally drowning in the torrential flood waters that had acquired a high current. The Army cantonment was flooded as were all the officials, with the government having disappeared from sight.

All communications broke down, and the city blacked out as residents tried to save their lives in the dark. Many who spoke to us broke down in tears while narrating the trauma. They were trapped and were saved only because many of the houses have attics where the families took refuge as the waters swirled around them.

The Rescue

The State government and administration was caught unawares and once Srinagar was flooded under 20+ feet of water the State machinery officials, police and military were all submerged and paralysed. Victims cannot rescue nor can they provide relief and this is exactly what happened as officials, police and Army found themselves marooned and got into the victim frame of mind. So in the moment of crisis they were not able to perform their responsibility as saviours.

In the first stage even as the Army was marshalling boats and its resources, the youth started braving the waters to save their families, neighbours and themselves as the waters kept rising and many buildings were demolished in front of their eyes. To their credit the Kashmiri youth, condemned as rioters and stone pelters, rose to the occasion and became the heroic rescuers. If it was not for their very timely, heroic, innovative and tireless effort the tragedy would have been much more grim and the casualty figure in Srinagar much greater. The youth of Srinagar deserves commendation, congratulations and gratitude. When they extracted themselves from being victims the armed forces too performed commendably but it must be said that they too were absent at the grimmest initial hours.

The Kashmiri youth broke down furniture, water tanks and all they could find to put together rough boats to rescue the people. They were joined soon by the Army that did a great job but was bound to some extent by the protocol of saving VIPs , tourists, and then the civilians in that order. Besides the Army continued with the protocol of security with each rescue boat manned by at least five to six jawans, and therefore having little room for the civilians shouting for help. However, the soldiers worked day and night both in Srinagar and other affected parts of the State, with any number of Kashmiris praising the efforts. But as a journalist said, and it is a view with which this team agrees, the Army did its job with commendation but it was the Kashmiri youth — many of whom did not know how to swim — who were the unsung heroes of what had by then become a mammoth rescue operation.

Relief

Relief Operations perforce had to begin while the rescue was on as the lakhs of people marooned had run out of food and drinking water. The rescue boats started carrying water and food packets, with choppers being used to throw packets that fell into the waters instead of into the hands of the people. There is a six per cent higher than national average of diabetes in the State, with insulin and medicines becoming another essential need.

Again, the State government remained paralysed, and it was the youth, the journalists and others who came together to identify the immediate needs of the people, and send out help calls on the social media for the items required. They formed teams to distribute the relief material with the Army of course taking care of the larger operations on this front. However, the absence of the civilian administration hampered the work of the Army as well in the relief operations with serious problems of coordination that still do not seem to have been rectified.

Individuals and organisations from cities outside Jammu and Kashmir contributed greatly in sending across teams of doctors and volunteers as well as relief material. In fact very soon, because of coordination between civil society groups and the Kashmiris per se, the scarcity of medicines like insulin were overcome. Most Kashmiris spoken to said that there was sufficient material in the form of clothes, medicines, drinking water but the problem remained in the coordination, and the red tapism of the State government in allowing them to clear the material without the usual red tapism. The result was that large piles of relief material collected at the airport while the State government officials wrangled over the paper work. This has also led to a perception, right or wrong, that the National Conference and its government is trying to seize the goods meant for relief for others, and distribute it under its own banner for political mileage.

However, the government has been more visible in this field now than it was earlier and vaccination teams have been moving around the affected areas to prevent an epidemic. The swift clearance of the carcasses is a plus for the government and the local bodies, with the cold weather contributing to the fact that large scale disease has not engulfed the devastated State because of the stagnant water and the continuing rot. A major problem is the onsetting winter with blankets, warm clothes and shelters urgently required. Not much has moved on this front as well, with lakhs still homeless with their homes either washed away or in no state to be occupied because of the damp and the erosion by the flood waters that have rendered most of the houses unsafe.

Rehabilitation

The damage caused to government installations, official housing and infrastructure, public works such as roads, bridges, school and hospital buildings, administrative offices, electrical installations and electronic networks, besides severe damage to agriculture (rice crop) and horticulture (the apple crop this year) is being officially estimated at Rs. 30,000 crore. Unofficially political parties estimate the losses at Rs 100,000 crores.

This, however, seems a guess more than an approximation. If the severe losses sustained by private citizens — their homes, businesses, industries all gone — is considered, any considerably higher amount would seem plausible and the figure of Rs. 100,000 crore may not be extravagant, though this is also something of an educated guess. An urgent damage assessment conducted by top-flight professionals with relevant experience is, thus, strongly indicated.

Mr. Bashir Mir, the president of the apple growers’ association of Wagoora tehsil of Baramulla district, Kashmir’s most valuable apple region, informed the CPA team that approximately 25,000 apple-growing horticulturists of Baramulla district, would have been eligible for kisan loans from the banking sector of the order of rupees two to three lakhs each. They would not be able to repay the loan this year on account of gushing flood waters hitting the apple orchards. Prior to that the crop was already affected by a deadly pesticide. A similar number of horticulturists is likely to be adversely affected for the same reasons in the Pulwama and Shopian districts of South Kashmir. If the horticulturists’ loans are not waived this year, the apple farmers will be driven to rack and ruin.

Their incomes would be down to about 20 per cent of the norm while they would be obliged to pay seven per cent interest on their bank loans if the debt is not discharged within the year. It is situations similar to these that have led to farmers’ suicides in several states, including the well-to-do ones such as Punjab, Karnataka and Maharashtra.

The rehabilitation process is going to be a massive undertaking with conservative estimates putting the reconstruction of Kashmir at a minimum of five years. There is no indication that the government is even seized of this with Kashmiris all speaking of the urgency with which this should be tackled to prevent trauma, depression and of course, more deaths in the deadly winters. The Chief Secretary, however, said this would be done but the speed of governance, despite the urgency, seems to have hit an all time low.

Media

The role of the ‘national’ media television channels needs to be singled out in this report as the coverage has added to the chaos and the trauma of the floods. Most television anchors and editors were flown into Kashmir at military hospitality, were taken over the affected areas in choppers and put together a coverage exalting the role of the Army, as against that of the heroic youth. As senior politicians in Kashmir told the team, and there was rare unanimity in all on this, “if the media had not gone on and on about the role of the Army at the expense of all others, the rescue efforts would have actually brought the Army and the Kashmiris closer together.”

Instead the reverse happened. The insensitive questions while the flood waters were surging about how it felt being rescued by the “occupation” Army had no meaning for the Kashmiris striving to survive. And seeing themselves the bravery of the youth who had come together as never before. The anger spilled out as communications were restored and the news spread through the Valley. Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umer Farooq told the team that the Army had done good work of course and that everyone appreciated its efforts “but no one even bothered to report what our young people did, they really were the heroes of this calamity.”

Mehbooba Mufti was almost passionate in her anger with the media for creating severe complications when none needed to exist. She said that the one sided coverage had done immense damage in Jammu and Kashmir as it gave a lopsided and prejudiced view of the rescue operations. Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad was also highly critical of the senior journalists staying away from the city, in sanitised surroundings, without bothering to report what was happening on the ground.

At a time when the media could have acted as a cementing factor, it created a chasm that has impacted heavily on the Kashmiri psyche in this hour of disaster.

The over reporting of a couple — the team could not document a third — of incidents of stone throwing at the helicopters have also added to the fury. One of these was as the chopper was stirring the waters below and the people in unstable boats were in fear of capsizing. So they picked up pebbles or whatever they could to get the helicopter to leave. The other, as the residents said, was in anger over the non visibility of the government that the Army officers themselves understood.

The media’s insistence on scoring brownie points over the separatists in the midst of disaster has not gone down well in Kashmir at all. JKLF leader Yasin Malik did not hijack a boat as was reported, but insisted that when the relief was distributed in his area he should be also part of it. Also the Army did not save Hurriyat leader Ali Shah Geelani from the floods as the Delhi media reported for the simple reason that there were no floods in Hyderpora, where he stays, to rescue him from.

Recommendations

  1. A judicial probe-based on well-grounded technical assessments –into the causes of the flood waters entering Srinagar. Its terms of reference should include the status of the State government’s preparedness to cope with such a situation, and its actual performance once tragedy struck since in the perception of most people the State government became “invisible”.

  2. A probe by appropriate authority into the rescue operations conducted by the military. Many in Srinagar attest to their effectiveness, but also complain about their prioritisation. The general belief is that the focus of rescue by the armed forces was not ordinary Kashmiris but tourists, select members of the Kashmiri elite, and migrant labourers who have been living in the valley over the years.

  3. The framework of the probe into the conduct of the armed forces should include the work of their PR department which seemed to have gone into overdrive, resulting in very skewed television coverage that has only succeeded in tilting the perception against the Army and the country. This could have security-related repercussions.

  4. The electronic media played a very disruptive and vitiating role and gave reason to the Kashmiris to be hurt and angry. The efficiency of the operations was impacted by the one sided reporting.

Media presence during relief and rescue operations should be sensitively handled as a policy.

  1. An independent enquiry by civil society — including individuals and groups within Kashmir that bravely rushed forward with assistance of their own accord, voluntary organisations from across the country that involved themselves in relief work in Jammu and Kashmir, State political parties, and technical experts of different kinds from State and other parts of the country to assess damage and financial costs that must be made good.

  2. An appeal to all sections of society to maintain calm in the face of this massive tragedy and focus on a constructive approach, rather than look for partisan political advantage.

  3. The government and administration with the help of civil society must create a disaster management protocol and chain of command so that the same mistakes that facilitated the calamity to turn into a disaster of such tragic magnitude will not occur again. A natural and organic chain of command must be established. Young men who performed so heroically and ingeniously must be made a part of a volunteer disaster rescue force. The bureaucracy must be trained to not remain captives of the rule book in times of calamity and work apart from the rule book and in an innovative manner. 8. The State Government must also have a protocol in place where a line of command is established so that in case a calamity incapacitates part of the government, there is a chain of command that can take control and coordinate the emergency response to the calamity.

  4. A national disaster response protocol must be established which intervenes in a tragedy without waiting for an appeal from the State in case of a calamity. One point that angered the people of Kashmir was that they found products which were much past their expiry dates. This must be avoided.

  5. Specifically in Srinagar the stalled proposals to create efficient flood drainage systems must be expeditiously revived and urgently implemented.

  6. A campaign must be urgently launched to provide blankets and warm clothing on a large scale; this should be a civil society initiative.

  7. When rebuilding is commenced after relief is provided there should be a watchdog committee in place which is non governmental and non political to ensure that the rebuilding effort both in Srinagar and in South Kashmir as well as affected parts of Jammu is done in a legal and ethical manner. There is a danger of the politician-official-builder mafia nexus exploiting the tragedy to profiteer and indulge in land grab and encroachment.

  8. It may be time for the army to reevaluate their establishments, too. With climate change the probability of such calamities becoming more frequent and progressively more severe is very likely. The military base was waterlogged even 15 days after the disaster. The initial flood marooned the Army base in Srinagar and rendered it inoperable. Such situation could be strategically disastrous. The Defence ministry will have to rethink about their location in Srinagar and may have to shift to higher elevation. The Army must not be rendered inoperable in an emergency.

When things return to normal in Kashmir the various socio political religious groups who acted responsibly immediately, compassionately and bravely to rescue and provide relief to the marooned and distressed populace must be commended and honoured for their actions.

Filed Under: India Tagged With: Anand Sahay, Centre for Policy Analysis, Floods, India, Indian Army, Jammu, Kashmir, Natural Disaster, Seema Mustafa, Srinagar, Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Tushar Gandhi, Yasin Malik

Boy set ablaze by army men in Hyderabad dies

October 9, 2014 by Nasheman

army-ablaze-hyderabad

Hyderabad: An 11-year-old boy, who was set ablaze by unidentified military men, died at a hospital here Thursday, police said.

Sheikh Mustafauddin, who was found with critical burn injuries at garrison area in Mehdipatnam in the heart of the city Wednesday, died at DRDO Apollo Hospital.

The body was shifted to government-run Osmania General Hospital for autopsy. Police have tightened security around the military area to prevent any untoward incident.

The boy, a student of a madarsa, told a magistrate in his dying declaration that some army men poured kerosene over him and set him ablaze.

A resident of Siddiq Nagar, Sheikh was called inside the garrison area by two military men. They allegedly beat him and later set him ablaze. He sustained 90 percent burns and was found lying near the main gate of the garrison.

A case of attempt to murder was registered against unidentified military men at Humayunagar police station. It will now be turned into a murder case.

Police formed a special team to conduct the investigation. Hyderabad police commissioner Mahender Reddy said the guilty will not be spared.

The incident led to tension in the area as people came out on streets to stage a protest against the military personnel. Police used baton charge the protestors to disperse them.

The army authorities have denied involvement of any military man in the incident.

“On investigation, it is found that this allegation is absolutely false and no army personnel is involved in this incident. The army condemns this act. All necessary assistance is being provided to the police authorities to carry out a detailed investigation to arrive at the truth,” said a statement from the army authorities.

(IANS)

Filed Under: Indian Muslims Tagged With: Army, Hyderabad, Indian Army, Madrasa

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