Unsolved
Disappearances And
Beheaded Tourists In Kashmir
By
Arshad H Naqshabandi and Richard Powell
Sunday Herald
(UK)
22 June 2003
An election pledge by Kashmir's
ruling party to stop 'disappearances' and trace thousands of missing
persons has been denounced as little more than a 'hoodwinking' process.
Indian-administered Kashmir
has been a flashpoint between India and Pakistan for more than 50 years.
Many people have vanished, presumed dead or imprisoned without trial
or record.
Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad
Sayeed, whose own People's Democratic Party (PDP) won an election in
Kashmir last October, had promised to appoint an independent commission
to help locate the missing persons .
But nine months on, little
progress has been made and 26 more people have disappeared.
A week-long hunger strike
in protest earlier this year prompted
Sayeed to say that 60 people had disappeared in Kashmir over the past
14 years. But more recently Sayeed contradicted his statement in front
of the Indian state assembly and admitted 3744 persons had gone missing
since 2000.
The Association of Parents
of Disappeared Persons (APDP) maintains two people disappeared from
custody following a visit by the Indian Prime Minister, Atal Behari
Vajpayee, and Indian federal government interlocutor to Kashmir, NN
Vohra. APDP says its findings reveal 8000 people have disappeared in
custody in Kashmir over the past 14 years.
Pervez Imroz, a human rights
lawyer who spearheads APDP, said: 'During his election campaign [Sayeed]
repeatedly promised to set up an independent enquiry commission into
the disappearances if he came to power. However, this has proved to
be a hoax and more cases continue to take place.'
Former state law minister
for Kashmir Muzaffar Hussain Beigh -- now Kashmir's finance minister
-- stated 135 missing persons had been declared dead up to June 2002,
warning a far higher number could soon be revealed.
The APDP says more than 500
custodial disappearance cases have been established by Kashmir's judiciary.
'Vajpayee can understand
the lingering pain a person with a
disappeared son, father or husband in the family must endure,' says
Rahee Meraj, whose son was taken and not seen again.
As more Kashmiris disappear,
opposition to Sayeed and his 'healing touch' election pledges are dismissed
as part of a hood winking process.
'They are misleading the
international community by providing false data regarding the disappearances'
said 15-year-old Bilquees, whose father was taken into custody and not
seen again.
Nazim Jan, from the Kashmir
border district of Uri, is looking for
her three brothers. 'I want justice. I have been searching for them
for the last 13 years, but in vain,' she said. 'How can Sayeed, who
claims to champion the cause of helping those hit by violence here,
close his eyes to us?' Is he not the same man who promised us the healing
touch?' asks APDP member Parveena Ahangar, whose son went missing 13
years ago.
'And what about the independent
commission he promised to set up to investigate disappearance cases?'
asked Akbar Jehan, whose two sons were picked up by the Indian army
five years ago and not seen again. Ghulam Mohammad Bazaz, whose son,
Sajjad, was picked up by the paramilitary Border Security Force on February
12, 1992, says he met with Sayeed twice, and he assured him his case
would be looked into.
He said: 'My son was arrested
by Commandant Rathore of 30 Battalion of paramilitary Border Security
Force and it has been proved by court. But no action has been taken
against the arresting officer.'
On July 4, 1995, two Britons:
Keith Mangan, from Middlesbrough, and Paul Wells, from Blackburn, were
kidnapped by Kashmiri militants demanding the release of 21 of their
jailed colleagues. German Dirk-Hasert, Norwegian Hans Christian Ostroe,
and American Don Hutchings were also kidnapped while trekking in the
Indian Himalayas.
Ostroe was found beheaded
in a remote Kashmiri forest the following month after India refused
to release the militants.
Mufti Mohammad Sayeed's daughter,
Rubaiyya Sayeed, was herself kidnapped by Kashmiri militants following
his appointment as India's first Muslim home minister in 1989. She was
released in exchange for militants.
The region's principal militant
group is Al-Faran: an alias of the
Pakistan-based Harakat ul- Mujahedin (HUM). Al-Faran is a member of
Osama bin Laden's International Islamic Front, says the US State Department.
The UK, Germany, the US and
Norway say they are striving -- with the Indian and Pakistani governments
-- to determine what has happened to their missing nationals.