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Brutal killing in Kashmir threatens to raise India-Pakistan
tensions
By Vilani Peiris and Sarath Kumara
19 July 2002
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An attack on July 13 on a predominantly Hindu slum in Jammu,
the winter capital of the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, has
underscored the ongoing tensions between India and Pakistan. While
the incident has not resulted in any immediate military threats
from New Delhi, the region remains a powderkeg. More than a million
Pakistani and Indian troops still confront each other along the
border since last December when Kashmiri separatists attacked
the Indian parliament building in New Delhi.
At least 28 people were killed in the attack and many more
were injured. According to eyewitnesses, eight gunmen, some dressed
as Hindu priests, threw grenades and opened fire with automatic
rifles on the workers who were listening to the cricket match
on a battery-powered radio. The attackers then barged into the
nearby huts shooting indiscriminately before fleeing into nearby
forests.
Babloo, a 17-year-old balloon vendor, told the BBC: We
were following the match when there was the boom. Everyone thought
there was bomb explosion and rushed there. He suffered two
bullet wounds to the leg. Most of the victims were women and children.
One woman exclaimed: Why did they kill my granddaughters?
How had they harmed the militants in any way?
No organisation has claimed responsibility for the attack.
Various Islamic extremist groups opposed to Indian rule of Kashmir
have carried out arbitrary, sectarian attacks against non-Muslims
in the past. It is most likely that one of them organised the
July 13 massacre. But it cannot be ruled out that Hindu extremists,
including those with connections to the Indian security forces,
authored the attack. Communal fanatics from both sides have a
vested interest to heightening tensions over Kashmir.
Whoever was responsible, the attack, which was aimed at inciting
communal hatred, was profoundly reactionary in character. All
the victims were seasonal migrant workers from poor areas of India
who were camped in tents and shanties on a garbage dump on the
outskirts of Jammu. As one journalist explained, they were the
poor of the poor.
Hindu extremist organisations immediately seized on the incident
to agitate for tougher security measures to defend Hindus
in Kashmir. The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and other Hindu
chauvinist groups organised a bandha general strike combined
with business closuresin Jammu town and other areas to protest
against the attack. According to press reports, the demonstration
was dominated by anti-Pakistan and anti-government slogans.
Indias Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister L.K.
Advani visited the area last weekend along with the states
Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister, Farooq Abdullah, and his son,
Indias Minister of State for External Affairs, Omar Abdullah.
Confronted with angry crowds, shouting Why have you come
nowto seek Hindu votes, Advani promised that adequate
measures would be taken for security.
The incident will also be used by Indian security forces to
bolster repressive measures, which are directed against the states
Muslim majority and have played a major role in fuelling the conflict
in Kashmir. International human rights organisations have in the
past accused the Indian military and police of widespread abuse
of democratic rights, including detention with out trial, torture
and extra-judicial killings. Under the sweeping new powers of
the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA), the police have detained
96 people across the state over the last month.
Following the attack in the Indian parliament in December and
again after Kashmiri separatist fighters raided an Indian army
camp in May, the Indian government threatened military reprisals
against Pakistan. New Delhi blames Islamabad for organising what
it terms cross-border terrorism and insists that Pakistans
military strongman General Pervez Musharraf has to stop the infiltration
of armed Islamic militants into Jammu and Kashmir.
The initial response of the Indian government to the latest
attack was relatively low key. During his visit to Jammu, Advani,
who has a long history as a Hindu fanatic, avoided directly blaming
Pakistan for the massacre. Asked about Pakistans involvement,
he simply said: At the moment, I cannot comment and I am
collecting information.
After an emergency meeting of the Cabinet Committee on Security
presided over by Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee, Foreign
Minister Yaswant Sinha declared: It is clear that all this
is being carried out with the inspiration of Pakistan. It was
gruesome attack. As a number of commentators pointed out,
however, with the inspiration of Pakistan is not the
same as directly blaming Pakistan for organising the attack. After
50 years of debate and conflict over Kashmir, such fine shades
of meaning are significant.
International pressure
The apparently mild response in New Delhi, at least at present,
is purely tactical. Both British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
and US Secretary for State Colin Powell are due to arrive on the
Indian subcontinent in the next week or so for talks in New Delhi
and Islamabad.
For its own immediate purposes, Washington has urged the Vajpayee
government to refrain from any military action. Having enlisted
Islamabads support for the US invasion of Afghanistan, the
Bush administration has exploited its war against terrorism
to build up a significant military, police and intelligence presence
in Pakistan that would be placed in jeopardy in any war with India.
Powell condemned the latest attack in Kashmir, saying its aim
was to undermine efforts to ease tensions in the region,
but did not blame Pakistan. At the same time, the US sought to
mollify the Vajpayee government by promising to pressure Islamabad
to curb Kashmiri separatist groups. US State Department spokesman
Richard Boucher commented: We are continuing to look for
ways to continue the momentum [of stopping] infiltration so that
the Pakistanis carry out the pledge to make that permanent and
to eliminate camps and things like that.
In a comment on July 16, the Times of India pointed
to the pressure on New Delhi: The governments caution
is evidence of the difficult situation it finds itself in. The
international community has started putting pressure on India
to take further steps to de-escalate and begin a dialogue with
Pakistan.
The Vajpayee government, however, immediately came under fire
from opposition parties and also from among its Hindu chauvinist
allies. RSS leader K.S. Sudarshan stated: The RSS would
like to express its strongest exasperation over the repeated failure
of the government, both at the centre as well as the state, in
protecting the lives of the people of Jammu.
The opposition parties attacked the Vajpayee government from
the right, insisting that its response to terrorism
was inadequate. During a parliamentary debate on Tuesday, Congress
Party leader Sonia Gandhi demanded that the government take tough
measures to fight terrorism. Her deputy Shivraj Patil
accused Vajpayee of lacking a policy, a vision and determination
for fighting terrorism, and of relying too heavily on the US.
The CPI-M chimed in on the same note, calling for effective measures
to check terrorist activity. After offering to collaborate with
the government to curb terrorism, opposition MPs staged a protest
walkout.
Advani responded to the criticisms by renewing his attacks
on Pakistan. He said that, in discussions with a US official,
he had repeated Indias demand for Washington to place Pakistan
on its list of terrorist-sponsoring countries. If the US
wants, he said, it can stop terrorism and put an end
to terrorist sponsoring infrastructure in Pakistan by threatening
that Washington would declare it a terrorist state. But
neither Advani nor other ministers made any direct threat of Indian
military reprisal.
While Vajpayee and Advani may be willing to toe the US line
at present, in return for developing military and economic ties
with the US, the unstable character of the Indian government makes
it highly sensitive to charges from the Hindu extremists and the
opposition that it is failing to defend Hindus and India. In such
circumstances any incident has the potential to rapidly propel
the Vajpayee government into military conflict with Pakistan as
a means of shoring up its own support at home.
There is no shortage of pretexts. Violent attacks continued
in Jammu and Kashmir this week. On Tuesday, 14 people were wounded
in a grenade attack in a crowded street in the town of Anantnag
in Kashmir. The following day three people died and nine were
injured in a bomb blast. According to conservative estimates,
at least 60,000 people have died in the decade-long armed conflict
for control of disputed Kashmir.
See Also:
India rules out troop withdrawal from
Pakistani border
[4 July 2002]
Tense military standoff continues
between India and Pakistan
[28 June 2002]
India and Pakistan continue
to trade threats of war
[21 June 2002]
Danger of India-Pakistan war
remains high despite peace gestures
[13 June 2002]
US-Indian military ties: an
incendiary factor in an unstable region
[10 June 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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