Tuesday, September 20, 2011

'Accidental' tryst that unraveled truth

Nishwan Rasool:

Unraveling the truth often makes people attempt the unthinkable. Soon after the civil unrest in the Kashmir valley subsided last year, four young people had a tryst in the virtual world. They were strangers, but were bound by the common desire to tell the truth. Their virtual existence gave way to documenting the death of Sameer Rah- an eight-year-old boy, who was among the people killed during the period of Unrest. The four friends- Rizwan Alam Khan, Burhaan Kinu, Maryam Shamas and Shah Ifat Gazia, used their cellular phones and other portable devices to churn out a documentary detailing Rah’s death. The twenty-minute film titled 'Long ago I died', these days is being much talked about among film lovers in Kashmir. In a free-wheeling conversation with Nishwan Rasool, Maryam Shamas and Rizwan Khan talk about achieving the unthinkable.


NR: Tell me how was ‘Long ago I died' conceptualized?

RZ: During 2010 agitation, our parents had restricted our movements and the only option we had was internet to take out our annoyance and frustration. All of sudden we accidently came into contact with each other through a social networking site Facebook. That was the time when we realized that we shared a common goal and from that very point our journey to show reality and fact began.

NR: What has your initial idea of the Kashmir conflict been? And what's your present understanding of the issue?
MS: Notions have changed. In my childhood I saw Kashmir issue as a long tragic story with a foe I never recognized. It was more about human right violations. But gradually a deeper understanding of the issue has left me with no doubt that Kashmir is a political issue with a wronged past. The knots in history are more than what are visible. And without resolving these knots you can’t heal the wounds or expect justice.

NR: The Kashmiri youth have seen guns at the time when they ought to carry the toys in their hands? Last year’s unrest must have made impact on you as well. Was that the inspiration to make the film?

MS: More than inspired, I would say provoked.

NR: Could you explain?

MS: I mean every communication point was gagged during the period. We were left with nothing. So I guess it was provocation more than inspiration. Provocation to tell truth I must add.

NR: Tell me about the research days of the film?

MS: Actually in seeking the answers we only had more questions. From the graveyard to the place, where he died, Rah’s home, police stations, hospitals. In fact while doing all this we came across so many things small and big, that reminded us of the past- the forgotten massacres. The journey reminded us of our past.

NR: How difficult was it to maintain objectivity while dealing with a sensitive subject like this?

MS: To maintain objectivity is difficult but achievable, and for us it was extremely important. We were extremely careful that we do not fall in to the realms of bias.

Rizwan chips in and says: While dealing with a sensitive issues one has to be very careful, it should not hurt the sentiments of the people. To sum up, one cannot over do things.

NR: Do you think it is the responsibility of Kashmiri youth to raise awareness about the past or current happenings?

RZ: It’s not the responsibility of youth only but also of the elders to create mass awareness about the happenings which have taken place in the past. We are troubled to see that Kashmiri youth have forgotten many incidents which otherwise should have been highlighted in front of the World. There have been massacres like Kunanposhpora incident where the whole women folk of the village were raped by the armed forces. There has been Chattisingpora incident case where 36 Sikhs were massacred, the Gowkadal massacre and many more. How many of us know about these tragedies?

NR: What else can be done apart from visually chronicling Kashmir’s past?

RK: There should be seminars in colleges and universities about the history of Kashmir, where incidents should be discussed and people should be made aware of these facts. We believe that the only way to deal with the untrue world is to make yourself so much free that your very existence becomes an act of rebellion.



Silence is criminal at times. We need to stand up for justice, Shamas concludes.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Delhi blast: ‘Hang us if our children found guilty'

Nishwan Rasool:

The family of the two Kashmiri youth detained in Rajastha's Alwar region in connection with the Delhi blast, on Sunday declared to face execution if their sons were found guilty.



Abdul Gani Magray and his companion, Mian Ahmad, both hailing from Choogam area of Islamabad district of south Kashmir were picked up by police from Alwar on Friday in connection with the bomb blast in Delhi, a day earlier that left 13 people dead and over 70 injured.


“When the blast took place in New Delhi, Gani was home. He left on 8th of September, a day after the blast. This clearly indicates that his involvement in the blast is not impossible,” Magray’s cousin Ghulam Nabi says.



“We’re ready to face hanging, if the fair and free investigations find my cousin involved in the blast,” he adds.

Nabi says his cousin, who works as a stone miner is an illiterate person and had gone out of the Valley for the first time in his life, adding, "He is a hard worker who earns his living by working at a stone quarry."

“He has never indulged in any unlawful activity. Police can confirm it as well. He is a simple man and he fell prey to the deception of some unknown caller who asked him to come and receive the lucky draw he has won,” he added.

Urging the Chief Minister to intervene, the family member said that a fair and transparent probe will prove that the men detained for the bombing are indeed innocents.

Pertinently, the duo was arrested by a police party when they were searching for accommodation at hotel Gulab Devi Inn in Kishangarh Bas area of Alwar.

Meanwhile, police has given clean chit to the duo saying nothing adverse against them is in the police records.



“The track record of both the persons is clean. However, we can’t say if they have been arrested for Delhi blasts or for some other case,” a senior police official said.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Encounters 'premeditated, cover ups' in cases: Wikileaks

Nishwan Rasool:

The United States Embassy in New Delhi informed Washington that while in the early years of insurgency in Jammu and Kashmir government forces “carried out fake encounters “to hide their mistakes”, there were cases where they were “clearly premeditated”.



“When Kashmir took the mantle of "hotbed of terrorism" from Punjab, it also began to assume a greater share of likely staged encounters,” the cable sent in 2006 read.

“In some cases of security forces killing civilians and subsequently claiming to have killed terrorists, we can assume the high operational tempo led to accidental deaths that the security officers staged after the fact, to cover up mistakes,” the cable titled “staged encounters a blemish for India” said.

“In some cases, however, the staged encounters were clearly premeditated. For staged encounters in J&K that have subsequently been investigated and charges levied against the perpetrators,” the cable sent as an unclassified document, said.