http://scroll.in/article/814150/things-got-heated-but-not-threatening-an-eyewitness-account-of-amnestys-contentious-kashmir-meet

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'Things got heated but not threatening': An eyewitness account of
Amnesty's contentious Kashmir meet

A photojournalist recalls what happened at the Bangalore event that
resulted in sedition charges being filed against the human rights
group.

esterday · 08:15 pm
Updated Yesterday · 11:12 pm

Hari Adivarekar

On August 13, Amnesty International India held the event called
"Broken Families" at the United Theological College in Bangalore as
part of its campaign against human rights violations in Jammu and
Kashmir. The audience included families of those who had gone missing
(allegedly after being detained by the security forces), those who had
lost loved ones to fake encounters and people whose relatives had
alleged been torture by security personnel.

Two days later, sedition charges were filed against Amnesty’s
Bangalore unit after members of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad
complained that the event had featured “anti-national songs, raised
anti-national slogans, made anti-India and anti-national speeches and
raised slogans saying India’s Kashmir should "go to Pakistan”.

Hari Adivarekar, a photojournalist from Bangalore who had attended the
Amnesty event, tells Scroll.in what happened that evening.

It started off like any other programme. After introducing the event
and other niceties, the organisers screened video interviews of
parents who had lost their children to the unrest over the years in
the Jammu and Kashmir. That was when the issue hit home for a lot of
people and the video was punctuated by loud wails from the audience.

Families of people who had been killed or had gone missing in Kashmir
had been invited by Amnesty International. The venue was packed and
the wailing seemed to have a greater impact than the videos, because
it connected us to the grief of not just those on screen, but also
those who were right there, in the same room. You could feel their
pain, anguish and suffering.

Then, Ali Mohammed Shah, who had lost his son in 2002, allegedly to
torture by security forces, took the stage. His speech was eloquent,
poetic and philosophical. He, too, broke down. What we saw and felt
were visceral connections that go beyond that which words can explain.

His speech was heart warming. “Not only will my son never ask for
sweets again but even witnessing his shadow is not in his parent's
fate,” he said – at which point many in the audience let out a gasp.
It was almost like shayari – but in a grim, horrible, macabre setting.

Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
Reenacting tragedy
Some in the audience were wearing t-shirts that said “Kashmiri
Pandits”. They didn't seem threatening or menacing in anyway – just
people there to represent another point of view. Everyone was watching
the event peacefully.

Then a few youngsters from Kashmir performed a skit. It was a variety
performance of sorts – there was some singing, some theatre and some
chanting. Though their play wasn’t perfect, you could see their
intensity. They were speaking in Kashmiri, so I tried to understand
whatever I could through their gestures.

The skit opened with the scene of a happy family sitting together –
everything seemed normal. And then, something happened and suddenly,
one of them was taken away by security personnel and tortured a
little. He was eventually killed.

His parents, meanwhile, were running from pillar-to-post trying to
find him. After several dead-ends, they finally found his body. Though
that brought them some closure, the pain and suffering was evident.

They showed the body being lifted from somewhere. From what I
gathered, they were lifting it out of a truck, or someplace where a
young man’s body should not be. A lot of things about the evening were
more visceral rather than explicit.

A performance by Kashmiri youth. Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
A performance by Kashmiri youth. Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
Among the panellists for the event were journalist Seema Mustafa and
RK Mattoo, President of the Bangalore Kashmiri Pandit Association, and
the mother of Shahzad Ahmed Khan, who had been killed in the Machil
fake encounter in 2010.

They explained that they do not want to politicise the event and just
want to talk about the plight of families who have lost their loved
ones in Kashmir.

The drama that followed
Things began to heat up when Mattoo, while expressing sympathy towards
those suffering, said that the Indian Army is among the most
disciplined armies in the world.

That’s when one group in the audience shouted out in disagreement
while another group clapped and cried “Yes!”

What he said, however, seemed to have been taken out of context as he
was not allowed to complete his sentence. His message was actually one
of inclusiveness.

But it's important to note that young Kashmiris who had shouted out
against Mattoo’s statement were not insulting the Indian Army – they
were just disagreeing with him.

Then a Kashmiri Pandit stood up and called the dissenting group
"terrorists" – I don’t know what, if anything, provoked him.

The group was visibly upset and demanded to know what he meant. Soon,
it became a yelling match, with one group shouting louder than the
other. Others were trying to maintain calm, especially Amnesty
volunteers. Some Kashmiri youngsters were also trying to make sure
that their group doesn’t go overboard and were trying to restore
peace. Every time things threatened to turn violent, these Kashmiri
boys were at the right place at the right time, calming their friends
down.

However, Kashmiri Pandits were refusing to calm down. Finally, Mattoo
appealed to them to quiet down and move on with the programme.

The panelists. Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
The panelists. Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
Under control
After the panel discussion, Roushan Illahi – better known as MC Kash,
a rapper and emcee from Kashmir – took the stage. But he could perform
only one song because by then, the police had entered the venue.

They seemed pretty nervous and asked the organisers to close the
event, saying it was past 8:30 pm, the time at which it was supposed
to wrap up.

Amnesty declared the event over as soon as Kash finished his song. The
artist, however, looked very angry. He stormed off stage, swearing.

Some young Kashmiri boys in the audience, probably buoyed by this,
started shouting "azadi" and pumping their fists in the air. The
peacekeepers, as I had designated the Kashmiri youth who had tried to
calm things down earlier, again held their friends back to restore
peace.

My mother, who was at the event with me, was sitting in the midst of
the melee while I was photographing the event. But nothing was
threatening or scary about what was transpiring – if it was, I would
have left with her long ago. Later, she met the parents of missing
youth and was very moved by their stories.

By then, ABVP members were outside and appeared to be in the mood to
fight. The police, therefore, did not allow the audience leave in one
go – we were let out in batches of 30-40. By the time I exited the
auditorium, the police had dispersed the ABVP activists. Nothing
untoward happened after the event.

Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook
Credit: Hari Adivarekar/via Facebook

As told to Vinita Govindarajan.


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Peace Is Doable

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