Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Young girls are the new face of resistance

- Ashiq Hussain letters@hindustant­imes.com

FRESH TREND Barely into their teens, they have taken to the streets shouting azadi slogans and clashing with forces

They are young, most of them in their school or college uniforms. Some of them wear burkhas while many of them have their heads and faces covered. Their school bags slung on their backs, now they also have stones in their hands.

Young girls barely into their teens have become the new face of protests in Kashmir, adding a new dimension to the story of a Valley wracked by years of violence and brutal retaliatio­n by government forces.

This April, the Valley has woken up to fresh violence sparked by the killing of those people describe as innocent civilians by security forces. The anger has been fanned by video clips, which purportedl­y show human rights abuses by security forces, including the use of a Kashmiri man as a human shield. The anger has spilled out on to streets and young women are leading the charge.

A young girl seen kicking an armoured police vehicle has drawn particular attention for the anger it represents — she is said to have reacted in the manner after a college girl was injured on April 21 in Srinagar’s Old City. “Why should we fear? Things can’t get worse than what has already happened in Kashmir. We have seen dead, mutilated bodies. We have seen many of our brothers and sisters defaced by pellets. At the most, we will also die,” said Neelofar Jabeen (name changed on request), a 21-year-old arts student of Women’s College here.

A police official in Kashmir described the new trend as “teenage aggression”. “These things happen everywhere. Students come out in all parts of India to protest. Somewhere they come out for students’ rights and somewhere they come out for ‘azadi’. The aggression is the same. And women have been protesting in Kashmir even before,” the official said.

On Monday, Jabeen was part of student protests and stonepelti­ng in Lal Chowk, five days after schools and colleges opened following suspension of class work by government. Colleges were closed after students across the Valley took to streets on April 17 to protest police action, two days earlier, on fellow students of Pulwama Degree College in south Kashmir.

The girls shouted azadi slogans while the boys from the nearby Shri Pratap College and School targeted government forces with stones and projectile­s. Within no time many girls, some in dresses with floral prints, also joined the boys. The two groups mingled and chased the armoured vehicles of police and CRPF. The government forces retaliated with tear gas shelling.

“Nothing will happen if we remain silent. The brutalitie­s of Indian forces are continuing and the narrative of ‘paid stone-pelter’ by Indian media continues. Now what will they say when a student in uniform throws stones,” said a student of Women’s College. “The anger was (always) there but the Pulwama incident fired that even more. We have understood the power is in youth. It is now our turn. The Kashmir issue needs to be resolved. Majority of us want independen­ce,” she said

 ?? HT FILE/WASEEM ANDRABI ?? Kashmiri students shout slogans during a protest at Lal Chowk, Srinagar.
HT FILE/WASEEM ANDRABI Kashmiri students shout slogans during a protest at Lal Chowk, Srinagar.

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