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Mystery hair clippers hit Kashmir

Attackers chop off women’s long, braided hair, prompting vigilante street patrols

- By Aijaz Hussain

SRINAGAR, India — Hundreds of young men — armed with knives, cricket bats and iron rods — patrol the nighttime streets of India-controlled Kashmir these days, hoping their ad-hoc vigilante groups will deter the mysterious bandits reportedly chopping off women’s long, woven hair.

In more than 100 cases confoundin­g police over the past month, women said they were attacked by masked men who sliced off their braids.

The attacks — most reportedly occurring inside people’s homes — are so strange that police initially suggested women were suffering from hallucinat­ions, until the government-run Women’s Commission warned them against making dismissive comments.

The region’s top elected official, Chief Minister Mehbooba Mufti, tweeted recently that the braidchopp­ing was an attempt “to create mass hysteria and undermine the dignity of the women in the state.”

Still, police have no suspects and no leads, and no clue about the motives for the attacks.

“We’re frightened,” said Tasleema Bilal, a 40-yearold woman whose hair was hacked off last week while she was in her home in Srinagar, the region’s main city. She said she tried to remove the man’s mask, but “he was very strong, and like a commando almost snapped my neck” before escaping, leaving her hair behind.

Just days earlier, Bilal’s 16-year-old niece had also been knocked out by a blow to the head with a brick, only to wake up later in a hospital to find her hair also gone. Other women have said they were knocked unconsciou­s with a chemical spray that authoritie­s have yet to identify.

The mysterious braid thefts have spread fear and panic in the heavily militarize­d and disputed Himalayan region, where many among the mostly Muslim population already feel traumatize­d after decades of conflict between separatist rebels and India soldiers.

Similar incidents of hair banditry were reported earlier this year elsewhere in India, including in the northern states of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh. But nowhere have the attacks sparked such panic and vigilantis­m as in Kashmir.

While Kashmiri Muslim women traditiona­lly wear their hair long like women in other parts of India, most cover it with headscarve­s out of cultural modesty.

Separatist leaders, angry at the initial reactions by police, said the attacks were the “handiwork of Indian agencies” trying to cower Kashmir’s rebellious population, which is widely opposed to Indian rule.

Residents are also suspicious of the Indian authoritie­s, and some have accused soldiers and police of staging the attacks or protecting those responsibl­e.

“We want to know who the culprit is: police, army or civilians?” Bilal said.

Police Inspector-General Muneer Ahmed Khan said it was ludicrous to think authoritie­s were involved. Police said they would pay about $9,000 for clues leading to any of the culprits.

“It’s important to first know the motive behind such acts rather than who the culprit is,” Khan said. “Once the motive is establishe­d, it would be easy for us to solve such cases.”

This is not the first time bizarre reports have spread fear in Kashmir, which has known little else but conflict since India and Pakistan gained independen­ce in 1947 and each claimed the region as its own. The rival countries have since fought two wars over the mountain territory, and each administer­s a part of it. On the Indian side, an ongoing rebellion has left at least 70,000 people dead in rebel attacks and subsequent Indian military crackdowns since 1989.

When the braid-hacking incidents were first reported in July across northern India, officials brought psychiatri­sts into the investigat­ion to determine whether the women reporting the cases were suffering mental illness.

The suspicion that women could be imagining the attacks grew stronger once the attacks spread to Kashmir, where the territoria­l conflict had caused widespread psychologi­cal trauma and other issues such as suicidal tendencies. Patient numbers at Srinagar’s lone psychiatri­c hospital jumped from 1,700 a year to more than 100,000 annually after the conflict heated up in 1989.

One-third of Kashmiris questioned in a 2006 Doctors Without Borders survey said they had thought of killing themselves in the previous month.

While health experts dismissed the idea that women were imagining the attacks, pending scientific verificati­on, they warned that the braid banditry could push an already edgy population further to the brink.

“These instances will further complicate psychiatri­c problems present here,” said Dr. Mohammed Maqbool, who heads the psychiatry department at Srinagar’s Government Medical College.

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 ?? MUKHTAR KHAN/AP ?? Kousain Ajaz, whose braid was chopped off by unidentifi­ed assailants, is comforted by her mother inside their home.
MUKHTAR KHAN/AP Kousain Ajaz, whose braid was chopped off by unidentifi­ed assailants, is comforted by her mother inside their home.

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