The Militant
Vol.59/No.21 May 29, 1995

Kashmiris Demand: India Out Now!

BY GREG ROSENBERG

"Azad Kashmir! (Free Kashmir)" shouted women in the charred town of
Charar Sharif - the scene of a devastating inferno provoked by the
Indian army May 9.

The burning of more than 1,000 houses and shops in the town galvanized
new opposition to India's bloody rule over Kashmir - a territory of 7.8
million people, and the only Indian state with a Muslim majority. Tens
of thousands joined in protests to angrily denounce the army's actions.
"India get out!" demanded the former residents of the town, some 18
miles from the summer capital of Srinagar. "Indian killers go home!"

The events in Charar Sharif delivered a fresh political crisis to the
Congress Party government of Indian prime minister P.V. Narasimha Rao.

Kashmir lies in the foothills of the towering Hindu Kush and Himalayan
mountain ranges, bordering Pakistan, India, and China. Kashmir's Muslim
majority has waged a decades- long battle for self-determination from
New Delhi. This battle expanded into civil war in 1990, when rising
worker and peasant protests convinced New Delhi to dissolve the state
government and rule by fiat.

The Kashmiri fight for self-determination has its roots in British
colonial rule on the Indian subcontinent, the resulting partition of
India and Pakistan in 1947, and the desire of India's ruling families to
keep the possession in their grip. The rival capitalist regime in
Pakistan - which occupies one third of Kashmir - lays claim to the rest
of it. Islamabad and New Delhi have fought three wars since 1947, and in
1990 came to the brink of nuclear exchanges following rising protests in
Kashmir.

As justification for its hold on Kashmir, successive Congress Party
governments have painted the self- determination struggle as a Pakistani
aggression, complete with charges of "Muslim militancy" and terrorism.
While some armed formations fighting Indian troops favor annexation to
Pakistan, a majority of Kashmiris simply want independence.

New Delhi has continuously ignored United Nations calls for a plebiscite
on independence. Rao scheduled state elections in Kashmir for next month
to take the heat off his government. But after the burning of Charar
Sharif, senior Indian officials proclaimed the plan "dead in the water."

The Kashmiri conflict is the most explosive of several battles for
national rights throughout India, and the Indian capitalist families
need it kept in check to prevent a victory from inspiring fighters for
self-determination from Punjab in the west to Assam in the east.

12,000 troops vs. 50 fighters

Some 12,000 Indian troops surrounded Charar Sharif over the past 10
weeks in an attempt to corner about 50 armed opponents of New Delhi's
occupation. As the Indian army moved in May 9 and gun battles broke out,
a fire swept through the town, which at one time was home to 25,000
people. Most of the residents had fled earlier. Among the structures
destroyed was a mosque housing the 15th century mausoleum of Nooruddin
Wali, the patron saint of Kashmir.

The Indian army was quick to blame "Muslim militants" for the fire. In a
May 15 speech to Parliament, Rao declared the fire to be the work of
"militants from Pakistan." Army commanders offered profuse explanations
of their version of the events, but prevented reporters from getting
closer than one mile from Charar Sharif for several days after the blaze.

New Delhi's heavy-handed censorship was too much even for reporters for
the big-business press, who are prone to slavishly intone the mantra
that India is "the world's biggest democracy."

"On May 12, the army allowed nearly 100 foreign and Indian journalists
to survey the valley," wrote Shiraz Sidhva in the May 15 Financial
Times. "A few shots were fired and a building in the valley went up in
flames in perfect timing for the TV cameras. The army displayed the
bodies of five militants, who they said were foreign nationals.

"But later, when some journalists, including this correspondent,
returned to Alamdar Basti, near Chrar-e- Sharief, the bodies had been
brought to an open field beside a road," Sidhva wrote. "Villagers wept
over the corpses and said they were local people, not foreigners."
Nearly 30 corpses have been recovered so far.

The Indian government maintains at least 300,000 troops in Kashmir -
about one soldier for every 25 people living in the region. New Delhi
rapidly swung its military machine into action in a vain attempt to
quash protests that swept the region.

Police opened fire on a large crowd that gathered to protest the inferno
May 11 in central Srinagar, killing two people. At Chadoora, near Charar
Sharif, police attempted to shut down a march of 20,000 protesters.

New Delhi slapped a 24-hour curfew on the area. But throughout the
valley, cops fired bullets and tear gas at protesters who defied it. In
Srinagar, troops did not even allow residents to open their windows,
ostensibly to protect two federal ministers visiting the region.

Abdul Ghani Lone, a prominent opponent of the Indian occupation, said
soldiers beat him on the head with the butt of a gun as he attempted to
walk through police lines to visit the burning town. As Lone was being
interviewed by the press, troops arrested him and dragged him to a
police wagon.

Despite New Delhi's claims that the guerrillas in the town had set the
fire, area residents were adamant that the army was to blame. Some
reported army helicopters hovering above the area dropping ordnance just
prior to the blaze.

At least 20,000 people have died in the Kashmir conflict over the past
five years - the vast majority slain by the Indian army, cops, or
special hit squads. According to Amnesty International, 715 people have
been tortured or shot to death while in government custody since 1990.

More than 14,400 Kashmiris have been detained under New Delhi's
notorious Terrorist and Disruptive Activities Act (TADA), while only 30
have been charged with any offense. TADA gives cops the powers to arrest
someone as a terrorist for carrying a pocketknife and hold political
opponents in jail without charges - sometimes for years.

"It is not a law, it is a tool of absolute repression," said Ravi Nair,
director of the New Delhi-based South Asia Human Rights Documentation
Center. Students protesting high milk prices, landless peasants
demanding rights, and farmers seeking lower electricity prices for their
village have been arrested under TADA. Some 80 percent of those arrested
under TADA in three of India's largest states are Muslims; only 13
percent of India's population is Muslim.

Crisis for Congress Party

Attempting to deflect mounting criticism of its conduct in Kashmir, the
Rao government quickly blamed Islamabad for the blaze. Internal Security
Minister Rajesh Pilot warned, "Pakistan should not test the patience of
this country."

The Kashmir debacle brought immediate calls for Rao's resignation. The
ultrarightist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), whose followers razed the
Ayodhya mosque in 1992, resulting in mass riots throughout India, blamed
Rao and the Pakistani regime. "The nation will never forgive the
government for failing to prevent the militants and mercenaries coming
across the border from Pakistan to enter the holy shrine, burn it, and
get away," said Krishna Lal Sharma, BJP general secretary.

Prominent officials of his own party also called for Rao to step down.
The prime minister's political fortunes have waned following state
elections earlier this year in which the Congress Party was trounced. In
four of the largest states - Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, and Andhra
Pradesh - Congress candidates were badly outvoted, and the party now
retains power in only 8 of India's 26 states. In Gujarat and
Maharashtra, the BJP and its ultraright ally Shiv Sena triumphed.

The Kashmir events promise to deepen opposition to Congress that has
crystallized around Rao's austerity measures, which are aimed in part at
attracting foreign capital. "The trouble with India's economic reforms
has always been their lack of appeal to the poor who make up the bulk of
the population," lamented a recent Financial Times article.

New Delhi has promised $5 million to rebuild some of Charar Sharif.
Muslim organizations rejected the offer, saying they will raise the
funds for reconstruction.


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