Khaleej Times

Ad hoc learning centres keep children off Kashmir streets

- AP

srinagar — When Kashmir erupted in anti-India protests almost four months ago, 14-year-old Shazia Batool was sequestere­d at home — forbidden from venturing out as stone-throwing protesters faced off in street clashes with government forces and demanded an end to Indian rule in the disputed Himalayan region.

Batool’s school was shuttered as businesses went on strike. For weeks, she saw only her mother and two siblings. “It was more like being in a prison ... it was maddening,” the ninth-grader said.

Now Batool and other children have found refuge and resumed lessons in a makeshift school set up by volunteers in a Srinagar mosque.

“Now at least I’m meeting other people. It feels better,” she said.

With Kashmir daily life still paralysed by strikes and rolling curfews, dozens of ad hoc learning centres have popped up in homes and religious centres, and thousands of students from grades 5-12 have signed up.

They gather during daylight hours, often sitting on the floor, to hear a teacher read aloud from a text or practice mathematic­al equations in a shared notebook.

The centres are doing more than just helping students prepare for upcoming exams, organisers said. They’re keeping kids off the streets and giving them comfort amid a civilian uprising sparked when a popular rebel leader was killed by Indian forces July 8.

Since then, at least 90 civilians have been killed, most of them shot by government troops during protests. Some schools have been turned into paramilita­ry bunkers. Nearly 20 others have been set on fire by people described by police as “miscreants.”

The learning centres “have kept kids somewhat busy in their studies at a time when everyone is traumatise­d,” said Javaid Bhat, one of many government teachers who have volunteere­d at the centres. “They provide a glimmer of hope and some contentmen­t, too.”

Still, most students in Indiacontr­olled Kashmir live too far from any centres to attend, or have been caught up in the street violence themselves. Students account for many of those killed in the uprising, and for most of the more than 1,000 people blinded or partially blinded by shotgun pellets fired by government forces at protesters. Authoritie­s have locked up hundreds of teenagers for fear they might rally more protests.

“Blood and ink can’t flow together!” read one placard held aloft by a teenage girl at a recent protest. “Justice for pellet victim students,” read another.

Kashmir has been under a tight security lockdown, along with a separatist-sponsored strike, as Indian forces struggle to quell the uprising and arrest thousands of civilian protesters. The region, also claimed by Pakistan, is divided between the two nuclear-armed neighbors by a heavily militarise­d Line of Control.

India has blamed Pakistan for supplying anti-India rebels with arms and training, and for encouragin­g the civil unrest to destabilis­e the government in Srinagar. Pakistan has denied the allegation, insisting it offers only moral support to the rebels and Kashmiris who want the region to be independen­t or merged with Pakistan. —

 ?? AP ?? Mohammad Hussain teaches Kashmiri children at an ad hoc learning centre at a local mosque in Srinagar. —
AP Mohammad Hussain teaches Kashmiri children at an ad hoc learning centre at a local mosque in Srinagar. —

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