I’m sure many of us have heard of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo in Argentina. It’s a movement of Argentinian women who staged a silent protest against the disappearance of their children during the military dictatorships of the 1970s and 80s.
From 1977 to about 2006, they gathered at the Plaza de Mayo in Buenos Aires and wore white headscarves embroidered with the names and dates of birth of their children – demanding answers from the state. it had been a bleak sort of protest, but it succeeded in getting the generals and cops prosecuted and punished for crimes against humanity.
Local law is frozen. An astonishing 99% of habeas corpus pleas since last August are pending
It’s possible that not numerous are going to be conversant in a markedly similar protest movement, the Association of oldsters of Disappeared People (APDP), founded in Kashmir in 1994 by Parveena Ahangar et al. whose loved ones are “disappeared”. the amount of individuals disappeared in Kashmir since the uprising against Indian rule out the late 1980s is between 8,000 and 10,000. Ahangar’s own son Javaid disappeared in 1990 when he was an adolescent .
Ahangar and her group gathered in Srinagar, the Kashmiri capital, on the 10th of each month, with headbands bearing blank outlines of passport photos, to memorialise the disappearances and to hunt answers. While the protest was often sparsely attended, for years the oldsters a minimum of had the chance to urge together publicly: to comfort one another , to demonstrate, to speak to the press. that each one changed a year ago today, with an epochal silencing of Kashmiri voices.
On 5 August 2019, India erased Kashmir’s long-held autonomy by revoking articles 370 and 35A of the constitution (which guaranteed the region’s special status), and put the region under a devastating military and digital siege. These campaigners for the disappeared, mostly women, have themselves disappeared: vanished from our screens, vanished from public memory. This and a number of other other erasures executed by the Indian state over the years, and most categorically in recent months, has led me to believe that Kashmir itself has been subjected to enforced disappearance.
Mass arrests, Gestapo-style surveillance, torture, the suppression of free assembly, the crushing of the Kashmiri press as boatloads of Indian journalists and foreign envoys continue guided “normalcy” tours, the decimation of the local economy, the longest internet shutdown ever imposed by a democracy, the crippling of the education system, the incarceration of thousands of children , the unprecedented criminalisation of speech (those who’ve been released have had to sign “bonds of silence”), the conversion of hotels and guesthouses into detention centres, the gagging of Kashmir’s civil society. It all serves to get rid of Kashmiri agency: to stay them firmly out of the frame.
Already, India is reprogramming the economic and social lifetime of Kashmiris by amending domicile laws, by allowing Indian citizens to accumulate property and land, and by abolishing longstanding institutions of the state of Kashmir. Among the bodies disbanded are a children’s commission, a women’s rights body, and therefore the state’s semi-autonomous human rights commission.
They have made plans to steal Kashmir’s resources. Recently, mining rights to Kashmir’s sand from its riverbeds was given to Indian companies via a web auction that was expressly out of bounds for local families who have trusted the sand for his or her livelihood for years. India is creating “land banks” for investment opportunities: granting itself powers to acquire land for its soldiers almost anywhere in Kashmir. Until recently, it required the consent of the government , which was last year replaced by an unelected, and unaccountable, Indian governor. Please mark those two words: “land” and “bank”; very potent tools for further exploitation, expropriation and occupation.
Kashmir today is being became a colony because the world watches. India’s home minister has talked about building settlements and temples. There has been a suspension of even the foremost nominal sort of autonomy. Local law is frozen. An astonishing 99% of habeas corpus pleas since last August are pending. The 70-year-old president of the Kashmir Bar Association, Mian Qayoom, who spent a year in prison, was released on the condition that he can’t head home until a particular date which he shall not speak. The supreme court of India issued these conditions.
Just before Covid-19 began to spread in February, a supreme court turned down a petition from another Kashmiri organisation – unknown to most of the people , Kashmir has an Association of Pellet Survivors, those blinded by pellet guns introduced in 2012 to quell protests. The court said it had been not necessary for them to be heard. An occupation are often identified by just this type of suspension of everyday legal systems – a state of perverse and all-pervasive exception.
India has began a project to exclude Kashmiris from even a semblance of control over their lives. it had been evident on 5 August 2019, when India rushed in thousands of additional troops and stop Kashmir from the planet , and it's been evident since then. In one among the cruellest acts of coercion, the administration now prohibits Kashmiri families from burying their slain militant sons in neighbourhood graveyards. to stop people from attending the funerals, Indian officials have removed bodies of militants to foreign places for quiet burials. The state has turned body-snatcher.
One of the ways an oppressive regime exerts control is by dramatising a population’s powerlessness by subjecting it to daily indignities. To inflict indignity on Kashmiris now seems to be Delhi’s primary strategy.
A year after the annexation, this is often where Kashmir is. A terrifying moment made infinitely worse by the lockdown necessitated by the pandemic: a siege within a siege, as we witness in real time the full-scale occupation of Kashmir
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