Kuwait Times

A birth, a death amid Kashmir’s harsh lockdown

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SRINAGAR: Around the time Mohammad Sikander Bhat lay dying at home in Indian Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar, Shafiq Ahmed was racing to get his pregnant wife to a hospital, negotiatin­g about 85 km of highways through a maze of heavily guarded checkpoint­s. Amid severe movement restrictio­ns and a total communicat­ions blockade, triggered by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to withdraw special rights for Jammu and Kashmir state, one man perished without his last wish fulfilled: that of seeing his three daughters.

The other battled the odds, saved his wife, and became father to a son. The death and the birth and both families’ struggles reflect the human cost of the government’s harsh clampdown in the Kashmir valley, home to nearly seven million people. For the first five days after the government’s move, parts of Srinagar had been turned into a fortress, blanketed with armed paramilita­ry and rolls of concertina wire blocking main streets. Anyone attempting to cross the checkpoint­s faced questions.

It was around 2 pm on Aug 7 that Bhat - suffering from cancer in his 70s - asked his son to go fetch his daughters, his son said, declining to be named because he feared authoritie­s could disapprove of him talking to the press. On most days, it would not take more than 10 minutes to drive to their homes, he said. That day it took more than an hour. “By the time I came back, father had passed away,” he told Reuters. Under normal circumstan­ces, he said they would have tried to call a doctor and make one last attempt to save Bhat, a moustached man with a love for gardening.

“This time, we could do nothing,” his son said, because there were no telephones available to help bring a doctor quickly to Bhat’s side. Authoritie­s say the lockdown and the detention of hundreds of local leaders aim to prevent widespread protests in the region, which is also claimed by neighborin­g Pakistan. Some of these movement restrictio­ns have now been eased, but aside from a few hundred public telephones, all communicat­ion remains blacked out for the 12th straight day.

Highway hell

Kokernag, a town in southern Kashmir, where Ahmed lives with his wife and daughter, was also locked down on Aug 7, he said. A lean man with a ready smile, Ahmed took his expectant wife to a nearby hospital for a check-up. There, doctors concerned about her blood pressure, referred her to the district hospital at Anantnag, some 25 km away, saying they did not have staff because of the shutdown. “And if something happened, they said they wouldn’t be able to manage without communicat­ions,” Ahmed said.

So, Ahmed, his wife, his daughter and sister-in-law piled into an ambulance. Ahmed said what is typically a 45-minute journey took more than two hours, passing through eight checkpoint­s. At the Anantnag district hospital, staff quickly ran tests. Again they determined they could not risk it, Ahmed said, asking him to take his wife to the main maternity hospital in Srinagar, about 60 km (37 miles) away, for a safe delivery. They were stopped 10 times and it took them 2-1/2 hours instead of one to get to Srinagar, where his wife was able to deliver a healthy boy.

But the rest of the family is in the dark. “Nobody has a clue where we are, in Kokernag, Anantnag or anywhere else,” Ahmed said, because all communicat­ion lines are down. The news of Bhat’s death has not travelled far either. On an overcast morning last weekend, a crowd of about 100 men and boys gathered at Bhatt’s gravesite in Srinagar on the banks of the Jhelum river for prayers. A military helicopter flew overhead as they prayed for Bhat. Paramilita­ry police stood at an adjoining bridge. — Reuters

 ??  ?? SRINAGAR: Protesters shout slogans at a rally against the Indian government’s move to strip Jammu and Kashmir of its autonomy and impose a communicat­ions blackout in Srinagar. — AFP
SRINAGAR: Protesters shout slogans at a rally against the Indian government’s move to strip Jammu and Kashmir of its autonomy and impose a communicat­ions blackout in Srinagar. — AFP

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