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Arundhati
Roy is a world-renowned Indian author and global justice activist. From
her celebrated Booker Prize�winning novel The God of Small Things to her
prolific output of writing on topics ranging from climate change to war, the
perils of free-market development in India, and the defense of the poor,
Roy's voice has become indispensable to millions seeking a better world.
Book Description
"Gorgeously wrought...pitch-perfect prose...In language of terrible beauty,
she takes India's everyday tragedies and reminds us to be outraged all over
again."�Time Magazine
Combining fierce conviction, deft political analysis, and beautiful writing,
this is the essential new book from Arundhati Roy. This series of essays
examines the dark side of democracy in contemporary India. It looks closely
at how religious majoritarianism, cultural nationalism, and neo-fascism
simmer just under the surface of a country that projects itself as the
world's largest democracy. Roy writes about how the combination of Hindu
Nationalism and India's neo-liberal economic reforms, which began their
journey together in the early 1990s, are now turning India into a police
state. She describes the systematic marginalization of religious and ethnic
minorities, the rise of terrorism, and the massive scale of displacement and
dispossession of the poor by predatory corporations. She also offers a
brilliant account of the August 2008 uprising of the people of Kashmir
against India's military occupation and an analysis of the November 2008
attacks on Mumbai. Field Notes on Democracy tracks the fault-lines that
threaten to destroy India's precarious democracy and send shockwaves through
the region and beyond.
Essay
on Kashmir Uprising of August 2008
in Field Notes on Democracy: Listening to GrasshoppersKashmir - a Revolt Against Indian Military Terror
"... there are many ways for the Indian state
to continue to hold on to Kashmir. It could do what it does best. Wait. And
hope the peoples' energy will dissipate in the absence of a concrete plan.
It could try and fracture the fragile coalition that is emerging. It could
extinguish this nonviolent uprising and reinvite armed militancy. It could
increase the number of troops from half a million to a whole million. A few
strategic massacres, a couple of targeted assassinations, some
disappearances, and a massive round of arrests should do the trick for a few
more years... The Indian military occupation of Kashmir makes monsters of us all. It allows
Hindu chauvinists to target and victimize Muslims in India by holding them
hostage to the freedom struggle being waged by Muslims in Kashmir. It's all
being stirred into a poisonous brew and administered intravenously, straight
into our bloodstream. At the heart of it all is a moral question. Does any government have the right
to take away peoples' liberty with military force? "
"FOR THE past sixty days or so, since about the end of June, the people of
Kashmir have been free. Free in the most profound sense. They have shrugged off
the terror of living their lives in the gun-sights of half a million heavily
armed soldiers, in the most densely militarized zone in the world.
After eighteen years of administering a military occupation, the Indian
government's worst nightmare has come true. Having declared that the militant
movement has been crushed, it is now faced with a nonviolent mass protest, but
not the kind it knows how to manage.[1] This one is nourished by peoples' memory
of years of repression in which tens of thousands have been killed, thousands
have been "disappeared," hundreds of thousands tortured, injured, and
humiliated.[2] That kind of rage, once it finds utterance cannot easily be
tamed, rebottled and sent back to where it came from.
For all these years the Indian state, known among the knowing as the "deep
state," has done everything it can to subvert, suppress, represent,
misrepresent, discredit, interpret, intimidate, purchase--and simply snuff out
the voice of the Kashmiri people. It has used money (lots of it), violence (lots
of it), disinformation, propaganda, torture, elaborate networks of collaborators
and informers, terror, imprisonment, blackmail, and rigged elections to subdue
what democrats would call "the will of the people." But now the deep state, as
deep states eventually tend to, has tripped on its own hubris and bought into
its own publicity. It made the mistake of believing that domination was victory,
that the "normalcy" it had enforced through the barrel of a gun, was indeed
normal, and that the peoples' sullen silence was acquiescence.
The well-endowed peace industry, speaking on the peoples' behalf, informed us
that "Kashmiris are tired of violence and want peace." What kind of peace they
were willing to settle for was never clarified. Meanwhile Bollywood's cache of
Kashmir/Muslim-terrorist films has brainwashed most Indians into believing that
all of Kashmir's sorrows could be laid at the door of evil, people-hating
terrorists.
To anybody who cared to ask, or, more importantly, to listen, it was always
clear that even in their darkest moments, people in Kashmir had kept the fires
burning and that it was not peace alone they yearned for, but freedom too. Over
the last two months the carefully confected picture of an innocent people
trapped between "two guns," both equally hated, has, pardon the pun, been shot
to hell...
A suuden twist of fate, an ill-conceived move over the transfer of nearly one
hundred acres of state forest land to the Amarnath Shrine Board (which manages
the annual Hindu pilgrimage to a cave deep in the Kashmir Himalayas) suddenly
became the equivalent of tossing a lit match into a barrel of petrol.[3]
Until
1989 the Amarnath pilgrimage used to attract about twenty thousand people who
traveled to the Amarnath cave over a period of about two weeks. In 1990, when
the overtly Islamic militant uprising in the valley coincided with the spread of
virulent Hindutva in the Indian plains, the number of pilgrims began to increase
exponentially. By 2008 more than five hundred thousand pilgrims visited the
Amarnath cave, in large groups, their passage often sponsored by Indian business
houses. To many people in the valley this dramatic increase in numbers was seen
as an aggressive political statement by an increasingly Hindu-fundamentalist
Indian state.[4]
Rightly or wrongly, the land transfer was viewed as the thin
edge of the wedge. It triggered an apprehension that it was the beginning of an
elaborate plan to build Israeli-style settlements, and change the demography of
the valley. Days of massive protest forced the valley to shut down completely.
Within hours the protests spread from the cities to villages. Young
stone-pelters took to the streets and faced armed police who fired straight at
them, killing several. For people as well as the government, it resurrected
memories of the uprising in the early nineties. Throughout the weeks of protest,
hartal, and police firing, while the Hindutva publicity machine charged
Kashmiris with committing every kind of communal excess, the five hundred
thousand Amarnath pilgrims completed their pilgrimage, not just unhurt, but
touched by the hospitality they had been shown by local people.[5]
Eventually, taken completely by surprise at the ferocity of the response, the
government revoked the land transfer.[6] But by then the land transfer had
become a non-issue, and the protests had spiraled out of control.
Massive protests against the revocation erupted in Jammu. There too the issue
snowballed into something much bigger. Hindus began to raise issues of neglect
and discrimination by the Indian state. (For some odd reason they blamed
Kashmiris for that neglect.) The protests led to the blockading of the
Jammu-Srinagar highway, the only functional road link between Kashmir and
India.[7]
The army was called out to clear the highway and allow safe passage of
trucks between Jammu and Srinagar. But incidents of violence against Kashmiri
truckers were being reported from as far away as Punjab, where there was no
protection at all.[8] As a result, Kashmiri truckers, fearing for their lives,
refused to drive on the highway. Truckloads of perishable fresh fruit and valley
produce began to rot. It became very obvious that the blockade had caused the
situation to spin out of control. The government announced that the blockade had
been cleared and that trucks were going through. Embedded sections of the Indian
media, quoting the inevitable "intelligence" sources, began to refer to it as a
"perceived" blockade, and even suggest that there had never been one.[9]
But it was too late for those games, the damage had been done. It had been
demonstrated in no uncertain terms to people in Kashmir that they lived on
sufferance, and that if they didn't behave themselves they could be put under
siege, starved, deprived of essential commodities and medical supplies. The real
blockade became a psychological one. The last fragile link between India and
Kashmir was all but snapped.
To expect matters to end there was, of course, absurd. Hadn't anybody noticed
that in Kashmir even minor protests about civic issues like water and
electricity inevitably turned into demands for Azadi? To threaten them with mass
starvation amounted to committing political suicide.
Not surprisingly, the voice that the government of India has tried so hard to
silence in Kashmir has massed into a deafening roar. Hundreds of thousands of
unarmed people have come out to reclaim their cities, their streets and
mohallas. They have simply overwhelmed the heavily armed security forces by
their sheer numbers, and with a remarkable display of raw courage.
Raised in a playground of army camps, checkpoints, and bunkers, with screams
from torture chambers for a sound track, the younger generation has suddenly
discovered the power of mass protest, and above all, the dignity of being able
to straighten their shoulders and speak for themselves, represent themselves.
For them it is nothing short of an epiphany. They're in full flow, not even the
fear of death seems to hold them back. And once that fear has gone, of what use
is the largest or second largest army in the world? What threat does it hold?
Who should know that better than the people of India who won their independence
in the way that they did?
THE CIRCUMSTANCES in Kashmir being what they are, it is hard for the spin
doctors to fall back on the same old same old, to claim that it's all the doing
of Pakistan's ISI, or that people are being coerced by militants. Since the
thirties the question of who can claim the right to represent that elusive thing
known as "Kashmiri sentiment" has been bitterly contested. Was it Sheikh
Abdullah? The Muslim Conference? Who is it today? The mainstream political
parties? The Hurriyat? The militants? This time around, the people are in
charge.
There have been mass rallies in the past, but none in recent memory that
have been so sustained and widespread. The mainstream political parties of
Kashmir--National Conference, Peoples Democratic Party--feted by the deep state
and the Indian media despite the pathetic voter turnout in election after
election, appear dutifully for debates in New Delhi's TV studios, but can't
muster the courage to appear on the streets of Kashmir. The armed militants who,
through the worst years of repression were seen as the only ones carrying the
torch of Azadi forward, if they are around at all, seem content to take a back
seat and let people do the fighting for a change.
The separatist leaders who do appear and speak at the rallies are not leaders so
much as followers, being guided by the phenomenal spontaneous energy of a caged,
enraged people that has exploded on Kashmir's streets. The leaders, such as they
are, have been presented with a full-blown revolution.
The only condition seems
to be that they have to do as the people say. If they say things that people do
not wish to hear, they are gently persuaded to come out, publicly apologize and
correct their course.
This applies to all of them, including Syed Ali Shah
Geelani who at a public rally recently proclaimed himself the movement's only
leader. It was a monumental political blunder that very nearly shattered the
fragile new alliance between the various factions of the struggle. Within hours
he retracted his statement.[10] Like it or not, this is democracy. No democrat
can pretend otherwise.
Day after day hundreds of thousands of people swarm around places that hold
terrible memories for them. They demolish bunkers, break through cordons of
concertina wire, and stare straight down the barrels of soldiers' machine guns,
saying what very few in India want to hear: "Hum Kya Chahtey? Azadi!" (We want
freedom).
And, it has to be said, in equal numbers and with equal intensity:
"Jeevey Jeevey Pakistan" (Long live Pakistan).
That sound reverberates through the valley like the drumbeat of steady rain on a
tin roof, like the roll of thunder during an electric storm. It's the plebiscite
that was never held, the referendum that has been indefinitely postponed.
On August 15, India's Independence Day, the city of Srinagar shut down
completely. The Bakshi stadium where the governor hoisted the flag, was empty
except for a few officials. Hours later, Lal Chowk, the nerve center of the city
(where in 1992 Murli Manohar Joshi, BJP leader and mentor of the controversial
"Hinduization" of children's history textbooks, started a tradition of
flag-hoisting by the Border Security Force), was taken over by thousands of
people who hoisted the Pakistani flag and wished each other "Happy Belated
Independence Day" (Pakistan celebrates Independence on August 14) and "Happy
Slavery Day." Humor obviously has survived India's many torture centers and Abu
Ghraibs in Kashmir.
On August 16 hundreds of thousands of people marched to Pampore, to the village
of the Hurriyat leader Sheikh Abdul Aziz, who was shot down in cold blood five
days earlier.[11] He was part of a massive march to the Line of Control
demanding that since the Jammu road had been blocked, it was only logical that
the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad highway be opened for goods and people, the way it
used to be before Kashmir was partitioned.
On August 18 hundreds of thousands also gathered in Srinagar in the huge TRC
grounds (Tourist Reception Center, not the Truth and Reconciliation Committee)
close to the United Nations Military Observer Group in India and Pakistan
(UNMOGIP) to submit a memorandum asking for three things: the end to Indian
rule, the deployment of a UN peacekeeping force, and an investigation into two
decades of war crimes committed with almost complete impunity by the Indian Army
and police.[12]
The day before the rally the deep state was hard at work. A senior journalist
friend called to say that late in the afternoon the home secretary had called a
high-level meeting in New Delhi. Also present were the defense secretary and
intelligence chiefs. The purpose of the meeting he said, was to brief the
editors of TV news channels that the government had reason to believe that the
insurrection was being managed by a small splinter cell of the ISI and to
request the channels to keep this piece of exclusive, highly secret intelligence
in mind while covering (or preferably not covering?) the news from Kashmir.
Unfortunately for the deep state things has have gone so far that TV channels,
were they to obey those instructions, would run the risk of looking ridiculous.
Thankfully, it looks as though this revolution will, after all, be televised.
On the night of August 17 the police sealed the city. Streets were barricaded,
thousands of armed police manned the barriers. The roads leading into Srinagar
were blocked. For the first time in eighteen years the police had to plead with
Hurriyat leaders to address the rally at the TRC grounds instead of marching
right up to the UNMOGIP office on Gupkar Road, Srinagar's Green Zone, where, for
years, the Indian establishment has barricaded itself in style and splendor.
On the morning of August 18 people began pouring into Srinagar from villages and
towns across the valley. In trucks, jeeps, buses, and on foot. Once again,
barriers were broken and people reclaimed their city. The police were faced with
a choice of either stepping aside or executing a massacre. They stepped aside.
Not a single bullet was fired.
The city floated on a sea of smiles. There was ecstasy in the air. Everyone had
a banner; houseboat owners, traders, students, lawyers, doctors. One said, "We
are all prisoners, set us free." Another said, "Democracy without Justice is
Demon-crazy." Demoncrazy. That was a good one. Perhaps he was referring to the
twisted logic of a country that needed to commit communal carnage in order to
bolster its secular credentials. Or the insanity that permits the world's
largest democracy to administer the world's largest military occupation and
continue to call itself a democracy.
There was a green flag on every lamppost, every roof, every bus stop, and on the
top of chinar trees. A big one fluttered outside the All India Radio building.
Road signs to Hazratbal, Batmaloo, Sopore were painted over. Rawalpindi they
said. Or simply Pakistan. It would be a mistake to assume that the public
expression of affection for Pakistan automatically translates into a desire to
accede to Pakistan. Some of it has to do with gratitude for the support--cynical
or otherwise--for what Kashmiris see as their freedom struggle, and the Indian
state sees as a terrorist campaign. It also has to do with mischief. With saying
and doing what galls India most of all.
Its easy to scoff at the idea of a "freedom struggle" that wishes to distance
itself from a country that is supposed to be a democracy and align itself with
another that has, for the most part, been ruled by military dictators. A country
whose army has committed genocide in what is now Bangladesh. A country that is
even now being torn apart by its own ethnic war. These are important questions,
but right now perhaps it's more useful to wonder what this so-called democracy
did in Kashmir to make people hate it so?
Everywhere there were Pakistani flags, everywhere the cry: "Pakistan se rishta
kya? La illaha illallah." (What is our bond with Pakistan? There is no god but
Allah.)
"Azadi ka matlab kya? La illaha illallah." (What does Freedom mean? There is no
god but Allah.)
For somebody like myself, who is not Muslim, that interpretation of freedom is
hard--if not impossible--to understand. I asked a young woman whether freedom
for Kashmir would not mean less freedom for her, as a woman. She shrugged and
said, "What kind of freedom do we have now? The freedom to be raped by Indian
soldiers?" Her reply silenced me.
Standing in the grounds of the TRC, surrounded by a sea of green flags, it was
impossible to doubt or ignore the deeply Islamic nature of the uprising taking
place around me. It was equally impossible to label it a vicious, terrorist
jihad. For Kashmiris it was a catharsis. A historical moment in a long and
complicated struggle for freedom with all the imperfections, cruelties, and
confusions that freedom struggles have. This one cannot by any means call itself
pristine, and will always be stigmatized by, and will some day, I hope, have to
account for, among other things, the brutal killings of Kashmiri Pandits in the
early years of the uprising, culminating in the exodus of almost the entire
community from the Kashmir valley.
As the crowd continued to swell I listened carefully to the slogans, because
rhetoric often clarifies things and holds the key to all kinds of understanding.
I'd heard many of them before a few years ago at a militant's funeral. A new
one, obviously coined after the blockade was: "Kashmir ki mandi! Rawalpindi!"
(It doesn't lend itself to translation, but it means: Kashmir's marketplace?
Rawalpindi!) Another was "Khooni lakir tod do, aar paar jod do" (Break down the
blood-soaked Line of Control, let Kashmir be united again). There were plenty of
insults and humiliation for India: "Ay jabiron ay zalimon, Kashmir hamara chhod
do" (Oh oppressors, oh wicked ones, get out of our Kashmir). "Jis Kashmir ko
khoon se seencha, voh Kashmir hamara hai!" (The Kashmir we have irrigated with
our blood, that Kashmir is ours!)
The slogan that cut through me like a knife and clean broke my heart was this
one: "Nanga bhookha Hindustan, jaan se pyaara Pakistan" (Naked, starving India,
more precious than life itself--Pakistan). Why was it so galling, so painful to
listen to this? I tried to work it out and settled on three reasons. First
because we all know that the first part of the slogan is the embarrassing and
unadorned truth about India, the emerging superpower. Second because all Indians
who are not nanga or bhooka are--and have been--complicit in complex and
historical ways with the elaborate cultural and economic systems that make
Indian society so cruel, so vulgarly unequal. And third, because it was painful
to listen to people who have suffered so much themselves, mock others who
suffer, in different ways, but no less intensely, under the same oppressor. In
that slogan I saw the seeds of how easily victims can become perpetrators.
It
took hours for Mirwaiz Umar Farooq and Syed Ali Shah Geelani to wade through
the thronging crowds and make it onto the podium. When they arrived they were
born aloft on the shoulders of young men, over the surging crowd to the podium.
The roar of greeting was deafening. Mirwaiz Umar spoke first. He repeated the
demand that the Armed Forces Special Powers Act, the Disturbed Areas Act, and
the Public Safety Act--under which thousands have been killed, jailed, and
tortured--be withdrawn. He called for the release of political prisoners, for
the Srinagar-Muzaffarabad road to be opened for the free movement of goods and
people, and for the demilitarization of the Kashmir valley.
Syed Ali Shah Geelani began his address with a recitation from the Koran. He
then said what he has said before, on hundreds of occasions. The only way for
the struggle to succeed he said, was to turn to the Koran for guidance. He said
Islam would guide the struggle and that it was a complete social and moral code
that would govern the people of a free Kashmir. He said Pakistan had been
created as the home of Islam, and that that goal should never be subverted. He
said just as Pakistan belonged to Kashmir, Kashmir belonged to Pakistan. He said
minority communities would have full rights and their places of worship would be
safe. Each point he made was applauded.
Oddly enough, the apparent doctrinal clarity of what he said made everything a
little unclear. I wondered how the somewhat disparate views of the various
factions in this freedom struggle would resolve themselves--the Jammu and
Kashmir Liberation Front's vision of an independent state, Geelani's desire to
merge with Pakistan and Mirwaiz Umar balanced precariously between them.
An old man with a red eye standing next to me said, "Kashmir was one country.
Half was taken by India, the other half by Pakistan. Both by force. We want
freedom." I wondered if, in the new dispensation, the old man would get a
hearing. I wondered what he would think of the trucks that roared down the
highways in the plains of India, owned and driven by men who knew nothing of
history, or of Kashmir, but still had slogans on their tail gates that said,
"Doodh maango to kheer denge, Kashmir mango to chir denge" (Ask for milk, you'll
get cream; ask for Kashmir, we'll cut you open.)
Briefly, I had another thought. I imagined myself standing in the heart of an
RSS or VHP rally being addressed by L. K. Advani. Replace the word Islam with
the word Hindutva, replace the word Pakistan with Hindustan, replace the sea of
green flags with saffron ones and we would have the BJP's nightmare vision of an
ideal India.
Is that what we should accept as our future? Monolithic religious states handing
down a complete social and moral code, "a complete way of life"? Millions of us
in India reject the Hindutva project. Our rejection springs from love, from
passion, from a kind of idealism, from having enormous emotional stakes in the
society in which we live. What our neighbors do, how they choose to handle their
affairs does not affect our argument, it only strengthens it.
Arguments that spring from love are also fraught with danger. It is for the
people of Kashmir to agree or disagree with the Islamic project (which is as
contested, in equally complex ways, all over the world by Muslims, as Hindutva
is contested by Hindus). Perhaps now that the threat of violence has receded and
there is some space in which to debate views and air ideas, it is time for those
who are part of the struggle to outline a vision for what kind of society they
are fighting for. Perhaps it is time to offer people something more than
martyrs, slogans, and vague generalizations. Those who wish to turn to the Koran
for guidance, will, no doubt find guidance there.
But what of those who do not
wish to do that, or for whom the Koran does not make any place? Do the Hindus of
Jammu and other minorities also have the right to self-determination? Will the
hundreds of thousands of Kashmiri Pandits living in exile, many of them in
terrible poverty, have the right to return? Will they be paid reparations for
the terrible losses they have suffered?
Or will a free Kashmir do to its
minorities what India has done to Kashmiris for sixty-one years? What will
happen to homosexuals and adulterers and blasphemers? What of thieves and
lafangas and writers who do not agree with the "complete social and moral code"?
Will we be put to death as we are in Saudi Arabia? Will the cycle of death,
repression, and bloodshed continue? History offers many models for Kashmir's
thinkers and intellectuals and politicians to study. What will the Kashmir of
their dreams look like? Algeria? Iran? South Africa? Switzerland? Pakistan?
At
a crucial time like this, few things are more important than dreams. A lazy
utopia and a flawed sense of justice will have consequences that do not bear
thinking about. This is not the time for intellectual sloth or a reluctance to
assess a situation clearly and honestly. It could be argued that the
prevarication of Maharaja Hari Singh in 1947 has been its great modern tragedy,
one that eventually led to unthinkable bloodshed and the prolonged bondage of
people who were very nearly free.
Already the specter of partition has reared its head. Hindutva networks are
alive with rumors about Hindus in the valley being attacked and forced to flee.
In response, phone calls from Jammu reported that an armed Hindu militia was
threatening a massacre and that Muslims from the two Hindu majority districts
were preparing to flee. (Memories of the bloodbath that ensued and claimed the
lives of more than a million people when India and Pakistan were partitioned
have come flooding back. That nightmare will haunt all of us forever.)
There is absolutely no reason to believe that history will repeat itself. Not
unless it is made to. Not unless people actively work to create such a
cataclysm. However, none of these fears of what the future holds can justify the
continued military occupation of a nation and a people. No more than the old
colonial argument about how the natives were not ready for freedom justified the
colonial project.
Of course, there are many ways for the Indian state to continue to hold on to
Kashmir. It could do what it does best. Wait. And hope the peoples' energy will
dissipate in the absence of a concrete plan. It could try and fracture the
fragile coalition that is emerging. It could extinguish this nonviolent uprising
and reinvite armed militancy. It could increase the number of troops from half a
million to a whole million. A few strategic massacres, a couple of targeted
assassinations, some disappearances, and a massive round of arrests should do
the trick for a few more years.
The unimaginable sums of public money that are needed to keep the military
occupation of Kashmir going ought by right to be spent instead on schools and
hospitals and food for an impoverished, malnutritioned population in India. What
kind of government can possibly believe that it has the right to spend it on
more weapons, more concertina wire, and more prisons in Kashmir?
The Indian military occupation of Kashmir makes monsters of us all. It allows
Hindu chauvinists to target and victimize Muslims in India by holding them
hostage to the freedom struggle being waged by Muslims in Kashmir. It's all
being stirred into a poisonous brew and administered intravenously, straight
into our bloodstream.
At the heart of it all is a moral question. Does any government have the right
to take away peoples' liberty with military force? India needs Azadi from Kashmir just as much--if not more--than Kashmir needs
Azadi from India."
Notes
1. See
Yaroslav Trofimov, "A New Tack in Kashmir," Wall Street Journal, December
15, 2008, p. A1.
2.
Human Rights Watch, India's Secret Army in Kashmir: New Patterns of Abuse
Emerge in the Conflict (Washington, D.C., May 1996). See also reports by the
International Crisis Group (http://www.crisisgroup.org) and Amnesty
International (http://www.amnesty.org).
3. See
Sonia Jabbar, "Politics of Pilgrimage," Hindustan Times, June 29, 2008.
4.
Gautam Navlakha, "State Cultivation of the Amarnath Yatra," Economic and
Political Weekly (Mumbai), July 26. 2008. See also Navlakha, "Jammu and Kashmir:
Pilgrim's Progress Causes Regression," Economic and Political Weekly (Mumbai),
July 8, 2006.
5. See
Indo-Asian News Service, "Amid Amarnath Land Row, Pilgrimage Keeps Its
Peace," Hindustan Times, August 14, 2008, and Indo-Asian News Service,
"Muslims
Holding Makeshift Kitchens for Stranded Amarnath Pilgrims," Hindustan Times,
July 1, 2008.
6.
Andrew Buncombe, "Kashmir Tries to Defuse Shrine Riots by Revoking Deal,"
Independent (London), July 2, 2008, p. 26.
7. Indo-Asian News Service, "Amarnath Land Row."
8. "On Punjab�J&K [ Jammu and Kashmir] Border, Parivar Pitches Tent, Calls the
Shots," Indian Express, August 6, 2008. See also Indo-Asian News Service,
"Land
Row Makes Kashmir Economy Bleed," Hindustan Times, August 7, 2008.
9.
"'No Highway Blockade, It's Only Propaganda,'" Times of India, August 17,
2008; "Gov[ernmen]t Counters Blockade Propaganda with Bulletins," Economic Times
(India), August 14, 2008; and Karan Thapar, "Jammu Discriminated and Kashmir
Favoured: Jaitley," CNN-IBN, August 24, 2008.
10.
"Hawk Geelani Says He's 'Sole' Azadi Leader, Then Apologises," Indian
Express, August 19, 2008. See also interview with Rediff, "'I Do Not Want to Be
Compared with Osama [bin Laden],'" Rediff News, August 25, 2008.
11. Aijaz Hussain, "Kashmiri Muslims March in Call for Freedom," Associated
Press, August 17, 2008, and "Indian Kashmir Separatists Announce Protests to
Continue Till Demands Met," BBC Monitoring South Asia, August 17, 2008.
12.
"Protestors March to UN Office in Kashmir Capital Srinagar," Deutsche
Presse-Agentur, August 18, 2008.