Kuwait Times

In Kashmir, brutality of videos deepens anger

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One video showed a young Kashmiri man strapped to a patrolling Indian army jeep as a human shield against stonethrow­ing protesters. Others showed soldiers beating local men with sticks as other troops stood by with guns drawn. As Shabir Ahmed watched the crude clips, captured on cellphone cameras and uploaded to Facebook, he felt terrified. They reminded him of his own 2001 detention by Indian army soldiers who suspected him of being a rebel sympathize­r; he said they subjected him to beatings, waterboard­ing and drinking water mixed with chili powder.

“For two nights I couldn’t sleep. I was not shocked but exhausted” after watching the recent videos, said 38-year-old Ahmed. “I have suffered a great deal in torture by soldiers. Suddenly, I felt as if demons reopened my old wounds and started haunting me.” Rights groups have long accused Indian forces of using systematic abuse and unjustifie­d arrests in Indiancont­rolled Kashmir. The Indian government has acknowledg­ed the problem exists, but denies it is part of a wide strategy to intimidate residents.

Kashmiris have been uploading videos and photos of alleged abuse for some years, but several recently posted clips, captured in the days surroundin­g a violence-plagued local election April 9, have proven to be especially powerful and have helped to intensify anti-India protests. ”Welcome to the world of social media,” said Siddiq Wahid, historian and former vice chancellor of a Kashmir university. “You don’t need verificati­on and you don’t need proof. The optics are so clear.”One video shows a stonethrow­ing teenage boy being shot by a soldier from a few meters away.

Another shows soldiers making a group of young men, held inside an armored vehicle, shout profanitie­s against Pakistan while a soldier kicks and slaps them with a stick. The video pans to a young boy’s bleeding face as he cries. Yet another clip shows three soldiers holding a teenage boy down with their boots and beating him on his back. The video that drew the most outrage was of young shawl weaver Farooq Ahmed Dar tied to the bonnet of an army jeep as it patrolled villages on voting day. A soldier can be heard saying in Hindi over a loudspeake­r, “Stone throwers will meet a similar fate,” as residents look on aghast.

“When they were driving me around, they were saying, ‘We will shoot (you),’ and were throwing stones at my head,” Dar told The Associated Press. “I was told not to talk. In one of the villages, an elderly man begged for my release but they didn’t listen to him.” Police have since registered a criminal case against unnamed Indian soldiers in that case, for the first time citing a video as evidence. In addition, the army’s “own internal inquiry has been initiated into the jeep video,” according to spokesman Col. Rajesh Kalia. —AP

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 ??  ?? SRINAGAR: In this photo, Kashmiri man Farooq Ahmed Dar, right, sits as his mother displays a muddy and torn out robe that Dar was wearing on the day of his alleged abuse at his residence in Chill village, about 60 kilometers southwest of Srinagar,...
SRINAGAR: In this photo, Kashmiri man Farooq Ahmed Dar, right, sits as his mother displays a muddy and torn out robe that Dar was wearing on the day of his alleged abuse at his residence in Chill village, about 60 kilometers southwest of Srinagar,...

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