Shujaat Bukhari was gunned down by the
militants on June 14, 2018. Bukhari was a well-known journalist in Kashmir due
to his fearless views on Kashmir politics. He worked for the Indian newspaper
The Hindu, before starting his newspaper Rising Kashmir. Not that he toed the line of the Indian state or the militants. He was at odds with both.
As I work on Kashmir issue since last two
decades, I am aware of Bukhari’s work. In my research, I referred
to many of his news pieces from The Hindu. During my research at JNU, New
Delhi, and at Jammu University, Jammu and Kashmir, I closely followed his work,
and referred to some of his views on Kashmir conflict and peace prospects.
During my recent visits to border areas to study cross-border roads and their
implications, I too followed his writings on the subject.
A journalist as we envision speaks
truth, and speaks truth to power. He is free and fearless. We know press
is the fourth estate of democracy, and for a smooth functioning of a democracy,
it is necessary that press is free, there is no interference, and no killing. Killing
a journalist, silencing a voice forever, is nothing but an act of cowardice. The
people opposing the views of Bukhari could have opposed him in a
democratic way, perhaps protesting against him, writing articles against him, or even filing a police case, if they think that is a proper action. Killing him is
nothing but anti-religious, anti-peace, and anti-human. The killers or Bukhari
are insane of the highest order, and any means adopted to bring them to justice
must be welcome.
The killing of Bukhari reminds me
the killing of another sane voice of Kashmir some 16 years ago, in 2002. Abdul
Ghani Lone was a peaceful voice of protest in Kashmir. The only fault he had,
and for which he paid with his life, was he advocated that Kashmiri people
should take part in elections. His main argument was that let Kashmiris take
part in elections, and bring their issues, including the voice of dissent and human rights issue to the legislature. A fine voice in Kashmir, he was silenced
by the militants.
The same thing happened with Bukhari. An independent minded Kashmiri, a Kashmir-loving journalist was
silenced, by the extremist Kashmiris. The loss of Bukhari was not only a loss
of journalism, but also a loss of very Kashmiris. There are many instances in
which Bukhari opposed Indian state’s policies in Kashmir. He could have an
effective voice for the Kashmiris. The militants, who were brain-washed, who believed only in the power of the gun, did not hesitate to
kill one of their fellow Kashmiris, who was wielding pen. They did not know
that pen is much more powerful than gun.
The message is clear. That unless
Kashmiris Rise (to imitate the title of Bukhari’s newspaper, Rising Kashmir),
the senseless killings in Kashmir would continue. Pakistan might have sharpened
its terror machinery and been getting ever ready to supply those machines to
Kashmir, but those machines could not have been active with the support of very
Kashmiris, whom the machines intended to kill. It is unfortunate that many Kashmiris do not see that they are
killing their own brothers and sisters. Unless they realize that they are mere
puppets in the hand of the puppeteers across the border, unless they realize that
the gun they wield is meant to destroy their own beautiful Kashmir, the
violence would continue.
I hope that the Kashmiris, particularly
the militants of Kashmir and their supporters, would realize the
futility of killings and counter killings. It would never solve the problem.
They may have guns, and hide and kill sane voices like Shujaat Bukhari, but by
doing they weaken their cause. The Kashmiri problem is partly due to the
mistaken belief on part of the militant Kashmiris that they can solve the
problem by guns, by killing people, and Pakistan is the big daddy across the
border, who will take care of them. They do not need to go far to know the
reality. They just look across the border on the Kashmir in Pakistan side. That
will provide enough information to dismantle their mistaken belief, and how Pakistan has treated Kashmiris in its
side of the border. It is called so called Azad (free) Jammu and Kashmir, but
its constitution says Kashmir Banega (will be) Pakistan (translating the whole thing
into plain English – The constitution of free Kashmir says it will be part of
Pakistan). An individual in that side can not get a government job unless he
professes the ideology of Pakistan. The Kashmiris in that side are treated as
second class citizens.
The sooner the Kashmiris, I particularly
mean the Kashmiris of the Valley, understand and realize this, the better for
peace and development. Religion is a matter of practice, but it is not a
policy. Arguing that majority Kashmiris are Muslims and they must be part of
Pakistan defies very logic. There are more Muslims in India than in Kashmir and
probably more than in Pakistan. The idea of creating purely a Muslim state goes
against the very idea of India, in which pluralism thrives. Living together is
the idea of modern democratic state. Monotheistic states are not a
practicable reality, particularly where people of multiple faiths live for
hundreds of years together.
Admitting the reality helps. Despite all
the problems, all the bad things, minorities in India are far better than
minorities, say in Pakistan or Bangladesh. Look at what Jinnah of Pakistan had said in
1948. He promised that all people will have freedom to practice their religion. But
we know what had actually happened. Few days back Charanjit Singh, a Sikh in
Peshawar, was killed by Taliban. His fault – he was a Sikh, and active in
society. The number of Sikhs and Hindus have radically dwindled in Pakistan.
From about 20 percent of population of Pakistan at the time of the partition,
now they are about 2 per cent. Look at India – each population has grown, irrespective
of religions. There is no suppression of minorities, there is no religious law,
as proclaimed by Zia, there is no invocation to Kashmiris to radicalize and to take
up arms as was done by Benazir Bhutto in 1987. These are all for anybody to
verify. This is the fact. The more the people of Kashmir go deeper into this,
the better.
I am not saying that Indian state has no
fault in Kashmir. It has committed many mistakes. I have articulated this in my
book Conflict Management in Kashmir, available at www.cambridge.org/ 9781108423892. But most violence is cyclic. The militants
and military are engaged in violence. Who would argue that the army suppressed Kashmiris
before 1980s? Even before 1980s India had comparatively strong army, but there
was no massive deployment of armed forces in Kashmir. But, why after 1980s,
there was massive deployment of forces? The rational minds in Kashmir must
think about it. Who kidnapped Rubiyya Sayed, and Why? Who created the militant
organizations and supported them? Who used illegal ways like Hawala to supply
money to militants and their leaders in Kashmir? Who orchestrated killings of
moderate voices like Lone and Bukhari of Kashmir? Who suffered? The people of
Kashmir. The Kashmir was shattered. The minorities of Kashmir were tortured and
killed. Kashmiris – Muslims, Hindus, Sikhs died.
Why was all this done? It is the mistaken
belief that Kashmir can be wrested by force that contributed to this mayhem. It
is the mistaken belief that by massively radicalizing impressionable youth Kashmir
can be wrested. It is the mistaken belief that by blasting bombs, throwing
grenades, killing people, Kashmir can be wrested. The more the violence, the
more the destruction in Kashmir. And that is the net result. The families of
the militants who die suffer, and also suffer the families of the soldiers and members of paramilitary forces who
die.
Kashmir was not like that three or four
decades ego. There are stories that the very Kashmiris nabbed spies from
Pakistan and surrendered them to Indian authorities during the 1965 war. The situation changed later. Pakistan failing to defeat India
directly in the war, used proxy war, armed the youth of Kashmir, radicalized
them with the poison of religion. And the youth fell into the trap. Now Al
Qaeda, Islamic State, Lashkar e Toiba, Jaish e Mohammad, are players in the
Kashmir conflict. How could they play a role in this conflict? Certainly many
of the members of these organizations are not Kashmiris. Certainly, they do not
represent Kashmiris. How come they became so important in Kashmir?
The moment the Kashmiris of the valley
withdraw their support to these militant organizations, peace will dawn in
Kashmir. The army will be redundant. The moment the youth of the
Kashmir realize that they are puppets in the hand of Pakistan, and they are not masters of their destiny, the problem will be resolved. The moment the
Kashmiris think rationally, separate religion from politics, the problem will
be resolved.
Religion is no doubt a strong bond.
Everybody loves his or her religion. There is no problem in it, and there should
be no problem in it. But religion can not be politicized and radicalized as in
Kashmir. That will invite disaster. Kashmir can not be a religious
state as is Pakistan. Kashmir has its own identity – that is Kashmiriyat. Let
Kashmiris realize this Kashmiriyat and revive this spirit. Let the Kashmiris
know that one of their ancestors was called Noor-ud-din by Muslims and Nund
Rishi by Hindus. Let Kashmiris study Kalhana’s Rajtaringini, and know their
history. Let Kashmiris know how their history witnessed confluence of religions
and cultures, and how Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam and Sikhism all flourished in
Kashmir. Let them know how in the Shankaracharya mountain, the Hindu saint Adi
Shankara meditated, before the onset of Islam in the valley. Let them know
about Lalitaditya, Zainul Abidin, Lal Ded, Sufism, Ranjit Singh, and the deep
history and culture of Kashmir.
It is foolish if religious radicals think
they can erase this pluralistic identity of Kashmir. If the militants think
that with the support of Pakistan, they can mute
whole Jammu and Kashmir, they can defeat Indian state, they are in illusion. Yes,
they can silence sane voices like Bukhari, and kill innocent civilians,
tourists or pilgrims, or some state officials. But their killing will also be
retaliated by the state. This is already going on for more than two decades. There
are already thousands of killings. I hope better sense will prevail on the
militants, and also on their leaders and their supporters.
Let the sacrifice made by Shujaat Bukhari
not go in vain.
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