Arab Times

Who is Salahuddin?:

Subcontine­nt

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Hours before the United States designated Kashmir rebel leader a global terrorist, he appeared in a video calling for strikes in the Himalayan territory in remembranc­e of another rebel leader whose killing by Indian forces last July triggered months of deadly protests.

The US State Department’s announceme­nt Monday coincided with an official visit by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Washington. It said Salahuddin “has committed, or poses a significan­t risk of committing, acts of terrorism.”

But to his vast Kashmiri following, Salahuddin, 71, is seen as a hero and his cause of ousting India from the mostly Muslim region is considered just.

Salahuddin is now based on the Pakistani side of the divided territory, where he leads Kashmir’s largest indigenous rebel group fighting Indian rule across a heavily militarize­d de-facto border. The group, Hizbul Mujahideen, says the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir should be absorbed by Pakistan, reuniting the two sides as the single territory that existed before India and Pakistan gained independen­ce in 1947.

The status of Kashmir has been a key dispute between India and Pakistan since the two split after the end of British colonial rule and each claimed the territory. They each control part of Kashmir and have fought two wars over their rival claims. Initially, the anti-India movement in the Indian-controlled portion of Kashmir was largely peaceful, but after a series of political blunders, broken promises and a crackdown on dissent, Kashmiris launched a full-blown armed revolt in 1989.

Salahuddin is considered to have been instrument­al in getting Kashmir to the point of rebellion.

Then known by his real name, Mohammed Yusuf Shah, Salahuddin and others helped political dissidents unite and contest state assembly elections in Indianheld Kashmir. The resulting Muslim United Front became a formidable force against the pro-India political elite, but still lost an election in 1987 that was widely criticized as rigged.

Salahuddin ran for an assembly seat, and lost, in the main city of Srinagar. He was dragged out of the ballot-counting hall and detained for months without charges, triggering a strong public backlash.

Young activists from the Muslim United Front began crossing over to Pakistan-controlled Kashmir, where they allegedly were armed and trained by the Pakistani military. Pakistan denies giving anything other than political and moral support to the insurgency.

By 1989, Kashmir was in the throes of a full-blown rebellion. Many militant groups surfaced, with up to 20,000 rebels staging bloody attacks on the Indian security establishm­ent and pro-India Kashmiri politician­s. India responded with a massive militariza­tion of Kashmir’s cities, towns and countrysid­e, saying it was fighting a Pakistan-sponsored proxy war. It unleashed a brutal counterins­urgency campaign, and soldiers were given broad impunity and allowed to shoot suspects on sight or detain them indefinite­ly. (AP)

Salahuddin

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