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WSWS : News
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India-Pakistan cross-border barrages exact an appalling human
toll
By Nanda Wickramasinghe
14 June 2002
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Despite claims by US officials and the international media
that tensions between India and Pakistan have eased, there are
few signs of any relaxation along the border between the two countries.
Since the huge military mobilisation last December, following
an attack on the Indian parliament by armed Kashmiri separatists,
exchanges of artillery, mortar and small arms fire have been daily
occurrences. Scores of people have been killed on both sides of
the border, many more have been injured and hundreds of thousands
of villagers have been forced to flee their homes and fields.
The latest reports indicate that at least six people died in
heavy firing across the border on Wednesday. Indian officials
announced that two army officers and a civilian had been killed
by Pakistani mortar and machine gun fire. Pakistan reported that
two women and a 10-year-old boy had been killed by Indian mortar
fire.
The incidents are treated as routine and are reported in no
more than a few lines. On Tuesday, Pakistani newspapers announced
that five people had died and four civilians were wounded as a
result of Indian artillery barrages on villages in Pakistan-held
Kashmir. The official death toll on the Pakistani side over the
first 11 days in June was 91.
A similar picture emerges in Indian-controlled Jammu and Kashmir.
On June 11, India claimed that a Pakistani attack injured three
civilians and hit an airport in Poonch. One died and several were
injured in another attack on June 9. Such reports stretch back
over months and the real casualties figures are probably understated.
The death toll on both sides of the border is, however, just
one expression of the grim reality facing millions of often poor
villagers. Vast areas of the Punjab wheat bowl have been made
uncultivable by land mines planted by the Indian and Pakistani
armies. Local villagers and cattle have been killed and injured
by accidentally stepping on the mines.
Villagers in the border area of Indian-held Kashmir recently
told Reuters that the situation was the worst at any time since
the 1971 war between India and Pakistan. In most cases one
or two members of the family have stayed back to look after the
belongings while women and children moved to safer places,
Balkar Singh said. A doctor in the town of Valtoha explained that
the number of people injured in land mines had increased due to
panic movement amid more extensive mining.
In Gharkwal in Indian-held Jammu, just a couple of hundred
metres from the border, 2,400 people climb into carts every evening
and spend the night at a forest hostel in the nearby jungle. According
to a reporter, the villagers ignored government warnings and broke
into the hostel building, where they feel somewhat safer than
in their wattle and daub huts. What will happen to our buffaloes?
Will we be ever able to go back to our homes? they asked.
Some people only leave their homes after dark. They have built
their own versions of bunkers where they spend the day. These
bunkers are often only pits a couple of metres deep
that have been widened at the base to make a primitive shelter.
Others just use the refuges during artillery barrages, which can
last for hours. Even then, the bunkers only offer limited protection.
In Gharkwal, shrapnel killed a young girl during a mortar attack
that struck the family compound.
Hundreds of thousands have fled the border areas and are housed
in often appalling conditions in makeshift refugee camps or are
forced to live out in the open. Sections of the Indian subcontinent
are currently experiencing heat wave conditions with daytime temperatures
reaching as high as 50 degrees Celsius.
Reuters reported this week that the Indian village of Deoli,
just 20 kilometres from Pakistan, was providing shelter for 200
families who had left their homes in Jabowal, 500 metres from
the border. They were packed into four or five rooms of the local
school and a few tents. Their crops were withering. A few returned
each day to feed the cattle which could not be left untethered
because much of the area is heavily mined.
One villager, Tirath Ram, commented: The chances of this
fighting stopping are very remote. We have lived with this for
eight years now. Earlier it used to be just machine guns, but
now its mortar. We cant live in our homes any more.
Another, Ram Lal, added: Its difficult to live here
in the camp. But at least its safe. We dont have to
dive into the mud and crawl in it 25 times a day, each time we
hear the firing.
An article in the Kashmir Times on June 11 was critical
of the Indian governments efforts to assist the refugees.
Many of them are forced to stay outdoors just in the open
ground even as [the] mercury crossed the 45 degree Celsius mark
and fresh showers lashed Jammu late last evening. No rooms. No
tents and nowhere to go. At Sua No 1 [camp], where no less than
500 border migrants are seeking shelter, the first
batch of tents came only last week, which is more than 10 days
after they were left under the open blue sky to fend for themselves.
Half of them are still without this privilege [of tents]...
Most of them [the refugees] are farmers and accustomed
to a bountiful yield of wheat or rice stacked in sacks in store-houses.
They now wait for their measly monthly relief package that consists
of seven kilograms of flour, two kilograms of rice and 10 litres
of kerosene per person. Though the authorities claim that this
relief is adequate for the migrants, the displaced persons say
just the contrary.
According to the Divisional Commissioner, about 70,000 people
have recently been displaced in the Jammu region alone. They are
housed in 91 camps, mostly government buildings. In addition to
the rations of food and kerosene, each person receives 200 rupeesor
just $US4 a month. Many of the camps do not even have adequate
electricity and water. We lack everything in this camp.
From bathrooms to toilets, from electricity to water and from
education to health, we lack everything, one woman explained.
Just over the border in Pakistan-controlled territory, conditions
are just as bad. The Los Angeles Times, reporting from
the border town of Chakothi on June 13, cited the comments of
Brigadier Iftikhar Ali Khan who explained: Its every
bit as volatile as it was two or three weeks ago. He said
that there had been no discernable decline in sporadic artillery
shelling or small arms fire.
On May 18, Chakothi was subject to intense shelling. Khan claimed
that the Indian army had sent 600 to 800 shells crashing into
the town. A number of rounds hit the army administrative centre
and several hit a nearby secondary school. At least one building
was damaged but no one was killed at the school where students
and staff retreated into underground bunkers. But a local woman
Nazeen Bibi was killed in the first barrage as she attempted to
cross a field.
Lack of democratic rights
Both India and Pakistan have cracked down on basic democratic
rights, as part of the military buildup.
In Jammu and Kashmir, the Indian government has over decades
used the most repressive methods to stifle opposition from the
Muslim majority in the state. The lack of democracy along with
extensive poverty and lack of services have been major contributing
factors to the growth of armed militia groups seeking an end to
Indian rule in Kashmir.
An Associated Press report last week described the situation
in Srinagar, the states summer capital. Daily life
is constantly disrupted in ways large and small by the presence
of tens of thousands of police and soldiers... There is no formal
curfew, but anyone on the street at night risks being mistaken
for a militant and shot by soldiers.
In daylight, patrolling police and soldiers are rarely
far from sight. One street corner after another is marked by sandbagged
concrete bunkers. On major thoroughfares, police officers make
random vehicle stops and check documents. Civilian movement is
tightly curtailed in areas where soldiers and their families are
housed.
A college professor, Farooq Shah commented: Its
stiflingyou actually feel you cannot breathe. You can never
escape the sense of insecurity and conflict, not for a moment.
You can be on your way to buy bread or milk, just some normal
task, and anything can happen.
The constant pressure since the outbreak of armed conflict
in Kashmir in the late 1980s has led to a huge rise in psychiatric
illnesses. An article in the New York Times explained:
In 1990, about 1,700 men and women sought help in Srinagar
at the Psychiatric Diseases Hospital, a run-down facility where
bare light bulbs hang from exposed wires in the directors
office. Last year, the number seeking help was 47,828, according
to hospital records.
Over the past decade, Indian security forces have detained
thousands of people accused of helping armed Kashmiri separatist
groups. Many have been held for years without trial. Human rights
organisations have accused the Indian police and army of torture,
rape and summary executions.
In the name of fighting terrorism, the Indian government of
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee has recently pushed through
draconian new legislation known as the Prevention of Terrorism
Act (POTA), which provides wide powers to outlaw organisations
and arrest without trial.
Last weekend police arrested Saeed Ali Shah Geelani, a leading
figure in the All Parties Hurriyat Conference (APHC), under the
POTA provisions and flew him to a high security prison in eastern
India. He has been accused, without any evidence being produced,
of illegally receiving money for armed militia groups. The APHC
is an umbrella group of legal opposition parties in Jammu and
Kashmir.
In Pakistan, at the behest of the US, the military regime of
General Pervez Musharraf has cracked down on Islamic fundamentalist
groups. A number of organisations, some of which sponsor anti-Indian
fighters in Kashmir, have been banned and their public offices
closed. Since the beginning of the year, hundreds of people have
been accused of belonging to outlawed groups and detained.
Both Musharraf and Vajpayee have exploited the current war
drive to divert public attention from their record at home and
to shore up their fragile administrations. While the anti-democratic
measures are purportedly being used to round up Islamic militants,
neither leader would have any compunction in resorting to the
same means to crush their political opponents. Their scant regard
for democratic rights mirrors the contempt for human life shown
by the military high commands as they subject border villages
to their daily barrages.
See Also:
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]
Tense military standoff between India
and Pakistan continues
[5 June 2002]
Bush speaks at West Point: from containment
to "rollback"
[4 June 2002]
A socialist strategy to oppose
war on the Indian subcontinent
[31 May 2002]
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