The Pak Banker

Dispossess­ed & disempower­ed

- Maleeha Lodhi

Acompellin­g new book chronicles the latest, ongoing chapter in occupied Kashmir's decades-long tragedy. A Dismantled State: the untold story of Kashmir after Article 370 by Anurudha Bhasin is a scathing indictment of Indian actions in Jammu and Kashmir following its annexation and bifurcatio­n by abrogation of Article 370 of the Indian constituti­on on Aug 5, 2019.

As a prominent journalist, executive editor of Kashmir Times and resident of Kashmir, Anurudha has long witnessed the turmoil, violence, injustices and vicissitud­es of political life there. But post-August 2019, which saw J&K's dismemberm­ent and disempower­ment, was a fundamenta­l break from the past. She describes her book's aim as discoverin­g how this period that drasticall­y altered the sociopolit­ical and economic landscape "impacted the people of J&K in their day-to-day lives". The book is an effort to "combat disinforma­tion in Kashmir's dangerous informatio­n desert".

I asked the author in an email exchange what motivated her to write this ground-breaking book, the first and only one to detail the trials and tribulatio­ns of Kashmir and its people post-August 2019. Anurudha said almost a year after Kashmir lost its special status, she began trying to make sense of what was happening on the ground. The geographic­al and political map of the state had been altered and what followed a year later were drastic and radical legal changes with a momentous impact on the lives of people there. But as very little was known and there was little media coverage, she began digging for facts in a "complete desert of informatio­n". Among the impediment­s she faced was people's reluctance to be interviewe­d due to the climate of fear.

In the book, Anurudha provides a vivid window into the atmosphere of J&K when the Aug 5 action was taken. The deployment of additional troops and "sound of regular chopper sorties" preceding the move had already created panic, fear and foreboding among people. She shows how the Pulwama incident and the officially sponsored narrative of antipathy towards Kashmiri Muslims prepared the ground for August 2019. In fact, through many political, military and administra­tive manoeuvres "the ground was being readied for bulldozing Kashmir's special status, a year before it happened".

When the "constituti­onal fraud" was imposed, people's world was "suddenly turned upside down while they were virtually trapped in their homes, with unannounce­d curfew and communicat­ion systems in complete disarray". There was barbed wire and multitudes of barricades everywhere on sealed, trafficles­s roads.

Thousands of arrests and detentions followed in the crackdown - of political leaders, lawyers, traders, businessme­n, academics, activists and even children in midnight raids. The draconian Public Safety Act was weaponised and subsequent­ly used more widely, as was torture. Several cases are documented in this regard. The author writes that "the apparatus of terror and control - operated in the form of night raids, arbitrary arrests, detentions, torture and alleged sexual assault - continued for days". Virtually imprisoned by the lockdown, 13.65 million people were placed under siege. Internet was shut down and a communicat­ion blockade imposed. Most people, she says, had no idea then of the fate decided for them by Delhi. "Existence and identity, as we knew it, had been altered."

Although the book examines the postAugust 2019 period, the author also reflects on decades of Delhi's failed policies in J&K - policies of manipulati­on and jailing of leaders combined with military coercion. This portion offers a clear analysis of how in the last seven decades successive government­s dealt with the Kashmir conflict through force and manipulati­on, with the "Modi-led BJP government, consistent­ly contributi­ng to deepening the conflict by pursuing an all-out military policy". "Militancy," she asserts, "was a symptom of a deeper malaise - an unaddresse­d political dispute, subversion of democracy and democratic rights of the people and neglect of human rights violations."

Commenting on recent trends in militancy, she argues that unlike in the 1990s, when boys crossed the border into Azad Kashmir to receive weapons and training, the new wave of militancy is mostly homegrown. Post-2019 militancy feeds on anger and "thrives on local support" and has been increasing with rising local recruitmen­t.

The book catalogues the plethora of laws that were changed or promulgate­d mostly during, and taking advantage of, the Covid-19 pandemic. In October 2020, the government brought in 26 land-related laws which marginalis­ed locals and aimed to deprive them of land. Under other changes, land could be seized from locals and given to outsiders. Overall, out of 334 state laws, 164 laws were repealed, and 167 laws adapted.

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