KARACHI: A team of Concerned Citizens Collec­tive, an Indian human rights organisation, which visited Kashmir from Dec 12 to 16, said on Friday that the people of the Kashmir valley continued to suffer as they had been abandoned by their central and regional governments.

In a statement, it said there was no proportionality of state res­po­nse as stone-pelting was met by bullets and pellet guns.

“The high proportion of injuries on the face and above the waist demonstrate that there is official intention to shower hundreds of pellets on the agitated population, not to disperse but to kill or permanently disable it,” the statement said.

This attitude of the governments, both regional and central, the team members said, was even more regrettable because a large number of the victims of bullet and pellet guns were children and many of them were so young that they could not have been part of any agitation.

They observed that there was a sense of fear among minorities, liberals and the poor in parts of India beca­use of the same approach of the central government to its working people.

“They, therefore, stand in solidarity with all these people and demand that pellet guns should be banned forth­with,” the statement said.

They demanded that both India’s central and regional governments publicly ex­press regret for their use of pellet guns against children and civilians.

“A number of people who met the team members asked that if the Kashmiri people are indeed equal citizens of India then why the government and its security establishment use forms and levels of state violence in the Kashmir valley that they do not use in other parts of the country?”

It said the team, comprising Tapan Bose, Harsh Mander, Pamela Philipose, Dinesh Mohan and Navsharan Kaur, met a wide range of Kashmiri population over their four-day stay in Kashmir.

“They interacted with over 150 persons, ranging from children disabled by pellets and bullets and their caregivers, youth, women, older people, working people, farmers, doctors, human rights and civil society activists, journalists, traders, writers, and villagers in Kulgam, Pulwama and Anantnag,” the statement said.

Published in Dawn, December 17th, 2016

Opinion

Editorial

Reserved seats
Updated 15 May, 2024

Reserved seats

The ECP's decisions and actions clearly need to be reviewed in light of the country’s laws.
Secretive state
15 May, 2024

Secretive state

THERE is a fresh push by the state to stamp out all criticism by using the alibi of protecting national interests....
Plague of rape
15 May, 2024

Plague of rape

FLAWED narratives about women — from being weak and vulnerable to provocative and culpable — have led to...
Privatisation divide
Updated 14 May, 2024

Privatisation divide

How this disagreement within the government will sit with the IMF is anybody’s guess.
AJK protests
14 May, 2024

AJK protests

SINCE last week, Azad Jammu & Kashmir has been roiled by protests, fuelled principally by a disconnect between...
Guns and guards
14 May, 2024

Guns and guards

THERE are some flawed aspects to our society that we must start to fix at the grassroots level. One of these is the...