A recent visit to Kashmir took me to Pulwama thats 50-km off Srinagar in the Valleys disturbed southern parts. There I met three young stone-pelters on the run from security forces.
Yes, we pelt stones; we want freedom, said the more talkative among them, giving his name as Jehangir. The two introduced themselves as Adil and Omar.
Freedom from whom; from India, I asked. The reply came after a moments pause: From India, from oppression. Were students. Police arrest us, beat us up, haunt and harass our families
They all were in their early twenties; from families with meagre resources. In the 30-minute chat in a secluded corner of a crowded marketplace, they shared stories of police excesses. A local cop was the worst persecutor; locking up even innocent young men and releasing them for a consideration.
As we talked, the three sat packed in the back seat of my local contacts Maruti Alto. They smelt bad, looked disheveled and were fidgety. In distracted attention, they stared into their phones, intermittently showing me snapshots of youth blinded by pellets and incendiary message from militant leader Zakir Musa.
The former Hizbul Mujahideen commander had made headlines by threatening to kill Hurriyat leaders who called Kashmir a political dispute. Is Musa your leader? I asked. They said anyone with a gun was their leader be it Burhan Wani, Musa or the LeTs Abu Dujana.
They as much accepted as their leaders, parents of militants and protestors killed by security forces: The father who lost his son is our leader, not (Hurriyats) Syed Ali Shah Geelani who has Z-security. For them, Musa, an engineering drop-out, was an engineer forced to pick up the gun.
Omar had aspired to be a doctor. Together with Jehangir, hes wanted in cases under the public safety act. Ive no option. I pelt stones because Ive no gun to face security forces.
Wanis native village, Tral, located at a 25-km distance from Pulwama, is called Kashmirs Kandahar. A series of heists forced banks to keep ATMs without cash in the area.
I tried showing the troubled threesome the downside of a life in crime, of being in conflict with the law, regardless of their cause, the sense of being wronged. What if cases against youth are withdrawn; those whore jailed released and offered jobs or loans for small businesses?
Their eyes lit up but only momentarily. We cant live or eat freely, what to talk of jobs, countered Jehangir. But it might work if it happens, conceded Adil: Weve lost stake in the system for aspirations unfairly denied or defeated.
The students I met in Srinagar and Pulwamas Degree College were from better socio-economic background. But they felt similarly betrayed by the effete, corrupt system. Youth here lead a depressing life, noted Shamim Meraj, editor of Kashmir Monitor. Sports stadia are in derelict state and parks ill-kept since the 2014 floods. Even cinema houses are shut down, leaving the Gen-X hooked to internet that too gets blocked when protests happen.
On his initiative, Meraj has come up with a model the state administration could adopt. He has setup a football club- Real Kashmir to promote local talent in United Kingdom. If visas come through, wed be the first Kashmiri club to play on foreign soil and be judged by European scouts looking for professional footballers, he said.
A home-team playing abroad will indeed be a big deal for youth stereotyped as trouble mongers. Even in the chronically-disturbed Pulwama, students long for scholarship. Some among them carry extra shirts different from the college uniform. They wear them on the way home to avoid being mistaken for stone-pelters by police who round up all those whore in the uniform of institutions from where disturbances are reported.
Why not then the footballer shirts for fame?
The Article first Appeared In The Hindustan Times
Follow this link to join our WhatsApp group: Join Now
Be Part of Quality Journalism |
Quality journalism takes a lot of time, money and hard work to produce and despite all the hardships we still do it. Our reporters and editors are working overtime in Kashmir and beyond to cover what you care about, break big stories, and expose injustices that can change lives. Today more people are reading Kashmir Observer than ever, but only a handful are paying while advertising revenues are falling fast. |
ACT NOW |
MONTHLY | Rs 100 | |
YEARLY | Rs 1000 | |
LIFETIME | Rs 10000 | |