The next three days resonate loudly
in the history of modern Jammu & Kashmir. It was on these days that the
course of the insurgency was set, but they are remembered for different reasons
by the Kashmiri Pandits and Kashmiri Muslims. So confused were the times that
the dates vary in different accounts.
Kashmiri Pandits today are convinced
that their mass exodus began on January 19, the record will probably show that
it spanned out through the first six months of the fateful year of 1990.Though
the state had gone through turbulent weeks since the release of four top JKLF
leaders on December 13, 1989, it was yet to see mass demonstrations that were
to break out on January 19 following the appointment of Jagmohan as governor.
On the next day, in a bid to show the new governor that they were actively
implementing the curfew in the Valley, the state police chief and the CRPF
ordered a crackdown which had the paradoxical impact of triggering mass
demonstrations. So, the next day January 21, when Jagmohan and his security
adviser Ved Marwah arrived in Srinagar, the police had lost control of the
situation and the Army had to be called out to enforce the curfew. There were
firings at several places resulting in many deaths, the largest number in
Gowkadal. Official figures claimed 12 dead there, but unofficial estimates run
between 38 and 100 and this has entered the books as the “Gowkadal massacre.”
The JKLF now decided to make January
26 their make or break day. The plan was to have small groups of people
converge on the Idgah grounds on the pretext of offering prayers for the
“martyrs.” Here, the Indian flag would be burnt accompanied by a declaration of
independence. When foreign correspondents began arriving in the city,
reportedly expecting a “big event” on that day, Jagmohan pre-emptively declared
a curfew and made it clear that it would be enforced, as it was on January 21.
The crowds stayed at home and the long insurgency began.
There have been several mass
killings in J&K such as the Chapanari massacre in Doda, the Prankote
killings in Udhampur district in 1998, the Chittisinghpura massacre in
Anantnag, the Amarnath mass killing in 2000, the Khistwar massacre of 2001,
Qasim Nagar massacre and Kaluchak killings in 2002, and the Doda killings of
2006.
Two major mass killing targetting
the Pandits — the Wandhama massacre of 1998, where four children, nine women
and 10 men were killed and the Nandimarg killings of 2003 when 11 men, 11 women
and one child were killed.
The terror that led them to leave
their homeland came from a stream of individual and often brutal murders of
members of their community. The killings in late 1989 of Tika Lal Taploo, who
headed the Kashmir unit of the BJP and N K Ganju, the sessions judge who
sentenced Maqbool Bhat, were the harbingers of the future. The Pandit community
began receiving threatening letters asking them to leave the Valley or face
death. After January 20, some Pandits began sending out their families, while
the men waited and watched. But in February, the killings, accompanied by
random acts of brutality, became more persistent. Lassa Kaul, the head of the
Doordarshan centre in Srinagar and executive engineer Ashok Misri were shot
followed by Satish Tikoo, a young social activist who lived in Habbakadal.
Ashok Qazi, who worked in the agriculture department was shot in the legs and
left wounded for hours before the terrorists put him out of his misery. A week
later Navin Saproo, a telecom engineer was shot dead in Kanikadal, Srinagar. On
February 27, Tej Kishen was kidnapped, tortured and killed.
By May 1990, some 80 Pandits had
been killed, some with great brutality. From February onwards the Pandits began
leaving and by June some 58,000 families had relocated to camps in Jammu and
New Delhi. Jagmohan tried his best, but there was little he could do to assuage
the fear of a community that felt abandoned and helpless. With the BJP taking
up the cause of the migrants, the secular establishment, sadly, played down the
enormous human tragedy that had unfolded.
The Janata Dal government that came
to power for 18 months after the elections of 1989, appeared to be in a
constant state of crisis. Prime Minister V P Singh had little time or the
inclination to pay attention to Kashmir. Actually, the entire political
establishment of the country had not quite grasped as to what was happening in
the state. In Jagmohan, it had a sincere, but limited man as a governor. In any
case without New Delhi paying attention, there was no question of evolving the
necessary strategy to deal with J&K. And so it has been since then. Many of
the Pandits who fled, remain in exile, and even now New Delhi doesn’t seem to
have a clear idea as to what its goals are in the state.
Mid Day January 19, 2016
Kashmiri
Pandits today are convinced that their mass exodus began on January 19,
the record will probably show that it spanned out through the first six
months of the fateful year of 1990.Though the state had gone through
turbulent weeks since the release of four top JKLF leaders on December
13, 1989, it was yet to see mass demonstrations that were to break out
on January 19 following the appointment of Jagmohan as governor. On the
next day, in a bid to show the new governor that they were actively
implementing the curfew in the Valley, the state police chief and the
CRPF ordered a crackdown which had the paradoxical impact of triggering
mass demonstrations. So, the next day January 21, when Jagmohan and his
security adviser Ved Marwah arrived in Srinagar, the police had lost
control of the situation and the Army had to be called out to enforce
the curfew. There were firings at several places resulting in many
deaths, the largest number in Gowkadal. Official figures claimed 12 dead
there, but unofficial estimates run between 38 and 100 and this has
entered the books as the “Gowkadal massacre.”
The JKLF now decided to make January 26 their make or break day. The plan was to have small groups of people converge on the Idgah grounds on the pretext of offering prayers for the “martyrs.” Here, the Indian flag would be burnt accompanied by a declaration of independence. When foreign correspondents began arriving in the city, reportedly expecting a “big event” on that day, Jagmohan pre-emptively declared a curfew and made it clear that it would be enforced, as it was on January 21. The crowds stayed at home and the long insurgency began.
There have been several mass killings in J&K such as the Chapanari massacre in Doda, the Prankote killings in Udhampur district in 1998, the Chittisinghpura massacre in Anantnag, the Amarnath mass killing in 2000, the Khistwar massacre of 2001, Qasim Nagar massacre and Kaluchak killings in 2002, and the Doda killings of 2006.
Two major mass killing targetting the Pandits — the Wandhama massacre of 1998, where four children, nine women and 10 men were killed and the Nandimarg killings of 2003 when 11 men, 11 women and one child were killed.
The terror that led them to leave their homeland came from a stream of individual and often brutal murders of members of their community. The killings in late 1989 of Tika Lal Taploo, who headed the Kashmir unit of the BJP and N K Ganju, the sessions judge who sentenced Maqbool Bhat, were the harbingers of the future. The Pandit community began receiving threatening letters asking them to leave the Valley or face death. After January 20, some Pandits began sending out their families, while the men waited and watched. But in February, the killings, accompanied by random acts of brutality, became more persistent. Lassa Kaul, the head of the Doordarshan centre in Srinagar and executive engineer Ashok Misri were shot followed by Satish Tikoo, a young social activist who lived in Habbakadal. Ashok Qazi, who worked in the agriculture department was shot in the legs and left wounded for hours before the terrorists put him out of his misery. A week later Navin Saproo, a telecom engineer was shot dead in Kanikadal, Srinagar. On February 27, Tej Kishen was kidnapped, tortured and killed.
By May 1990, some 80 Pandits had been killed, some with great brutality. From February onwards the Pandits began leaving and by June some 58,000 families had relocated to camps in Jammu and New Delhi. Jagmohan tried his best, but there was little he could do to assuage the fear of a community that felt abandoned and helpless. With the BJP taking up the cause of the migrants, the secular establishment, sadly, played down the enormous human tragedy that had unfolded.
The Janata Dal government that came to power for 18 months after the elections of 1989, appeared to be in a constant state of crisis. Prime Minister V P Singh had little time or the inclination to pay attention to Kashmir. Actually, the entire political establishment of the country had not quite grasped as to what was happening in the state. In Jagmohan, it had a sincere, but limited man as a governor. In any case without New Delhi paying attention, there was no question of evolving the necessary strategy to deal with J&K. And so it has been since then. Many of the Pandits who fled, remain in exile, and even now New Delhi doesn’t seem to have a clear idea as to what its goals are in the state.
- See more at: http://www.mid-day.com/articles/manoj-joshi-days-that-led-to-the-insurgency/16875154#sthash.OmAnlrM9.dpuf
The JKLF now decided to make January 26 their make or break day. The plan was to have small groups of people converge on the Idgah grounds on the pretext of offering prayers for the “martyrs.” Here, the Indian flag would be burnt accompanied by a declaration of independence. When foreign correspondents began arriving in the city, reportedly expecting a “big event” on that day, Jagmohan pre-emptively declared a curfew and made it clear that it would be enforced, as it was on January 21. The crowds stayed at home and the long insurgency began.
There have been several mass killings in J&K such as the Chapanari massacre in Doda, the Prankote killings in Udhampur district in 1998, the Chittisinghpura massacre in Anantnag, the Amarnath mass killing in 2000, the Khistwar massacre of 2001, Qasim Nagar massacre and Kaluchak killings in 2002, and the Doda killings of 2006.
Two major mass killing targetting the Pandits — the Wandhama massacre of 1998, where four children, nine women and 10 men were killed and the Nandimarg killings of 2003 when 11 men, 11 women and one child were killed.
The terror that led them to leave their homeland came from a stream of individual and often brutal murders of members of their community. The killings in late 1989 of Tika Lal Taploo, who headed the Kashmir unit of the BJP and N K Ganju, the sessions judge who sentenced Maqbool Bhat, were the harbingers of the future. The Pandit community began receiving threatening letters asking them to leave the Valley or face death. After January 20, some Pandits began sending out their families, while the men waited and watched. But in February, the killings, accompanied by random acts of brutality, became more persistent. Lassa Kaul, the head of the Doordarshan centre in Srinagar and executive engineer Ashok Misri were shot followed by Satish Tikoo, a young social activist who lived in Habbakadal. Ashok Qazi, who worked in the agriculture department was shot in the legs and left wounded for hours before the terrorists put him out of his misery. A week later Navin Saproo, a telecom engineer was shot dead in Kanikadal, Srinagar. On February 27, Tej Kishen was kidnapped, tortured and killed.
By May 1990, some 80 Pandits had been killed, some with great brutality. From February onwards the Pandits began leaving and by June some 58,000 families had relocated to camps in Jammu and New Delhi. Jagmohan tried his best, but there was little he could do to assuage the fear of a community that felt abandoned and helpless. With the BJP taking up the cause of the migrants, the secular establishment, sadly, played down the enormous human tragedy that had unfolded.
The Janata Dal government that came to power for 18 months after the elections of 1989, appeared to be in a constant state of crisis. Prime Minister V P Singh had little time or the inclination to pay attention to Kashmir. Actually, the entire political establishment of the country had not quite grasped as to what was happening in the state. In Jagmohan, it had a sincere, but limited man as a governor. In any case without New Delhi paying attention, there was no question of evolving the necessary strategy to deal with J&K. And so it has been since then. Many of the Pandits who fled, remain in exile, and even now New Delhi doesn’t seem to have a clear idea as to what its goals are in the state.
- See more at: http://www.mid-day.com/articles/manoj-joshi-days-that-led-to-the-insurgency/16875154#sthash.OmAnlrM9.dpuf
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