The BJP rustles up a mix of Indian nationalism and Kashmiri Muslim identity for a toehold in the Valley
On December 17, just a few weeks after the killing of BJP’s Shopian district youth president Gowhar Ahmad Bhat, another district leader of India’s ruling party, its Budgam district president Ghulam Hassan Khan, is on the main road of his native Ichgam village, talking to villagers without any security cover. All around are numerous banners made of green cloth with Islamic sayings written on them. It’s a Sunday, and the locals are still celebrating Prophet Muhammed’s birth anniversary, Eid Milad-Un-Nabi, which was on December 2 this year. “We celebrate it the entire month,” says Khan, who was a soldier in the Indian Army and later a militant, before joining the Congress first and then the BJP. Since his party colleague Bhat’s death, the government has been providing security to all prominent BJP leaders. Bhat, a 30-year-old health department employee, was found dead with his throat slit on November 3, a day after he was abducted by militants from a government hospital in Shopian.
The abduction and killing struck fear among local BJP leaders in Shopian and other parts of south Kashmir, making many of them choose to stay in summer capital Srinagar. Bhat’s kin refused an interview saying they want no more media exposure. At Ichgam, though, it’s a different story. Khan is not afraid and his personal security officer was not with him when Outlook met him.
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