October 14, was an interestingly different day in Kashmir. At noon, when almost four million phones broke their 71-days long silence, people talked to each other in disbelief. An emotionally surcharged man in Kupwara broke down while talking to his daughter, married and settled in Srinagar: “I was worried if at all you had anything to eat!”
But the worst was the Facebook post that a former journalist Irfan Rashid, now coaching in Delhi for IAS, who announced his friend Basra’s death. “Dialled her (Basra’s) number after 70 days with all the energy, strangeness, eagerness, but above all with love. It was 3pm. A different voice answered from the other side. I understood it is her mom. I said salaam to aunty and enquired about Basra,” he wrote. “I assumed phone network is weak that is why aunty didn’t hear what I said. The moment I repeated my sentence, she bursted (sic) into tears, sobbing like a child, crazy like a lunatic, tears flowing with cries. Basra is dead. Today is her 40th day.”
It was such a vital occasion that every media organization of any substance across the globe reported the partial undoing of the communication blockade. The Hindu ran a special story from Kozhikode wherefrom more than 100 Kashmiri students enrolled in Markaz Higher Secondary School talked to their parents for the first time in 72 days. “One of the teachers at the school lent them a phone, and the students took turns to contact their beloved ones back home,” the newspaper reported. “None of them was able to talk to their parents during Eid Ul Azha either. And, they were consoled by their friends at school.”
Since 2004, when Kashmir Chief Minister Mufti Syed and Markaz Chancellor Kanthapuram A P Aboobacker Musaliyar inked an agreement, the number of Kashmiri students is increasing with every passing year.
Bu hikaye Kashmir Life dergisinin October 20-26, 2019; Issue 29 Vol 11; BLOODY HARVEST sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Kashmir Life dergisinin October 20-26, 2019; Issue 29 Vol 11; BLOODY HARVEST sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Before The Kabul Retreat
Described as the ‘Graveyard of Empires’, Afghanistan was always termed to be at peace when it was at war. But the land-locked desert country that was always in turmoil and one of the worst targets of the Great Game suffered immensely throughout, especially in the last 40 years, Masood Hussain writes
FINGERS CROSSED
Almost everybody in academia and politics that Khalid Bashir Gura spoke to, the response over Kabul happens was simple – wait and watch
Parliamentary Committee In Srinagar
The visiting 28-member Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs have had detailed interactions with top civil administration and discussed developmental scenario and people’s welfare measures in Jammu and Kashmir. It is on a 4-day visit. Congress leader and MP Anand Sharma is heading the committee.
MUSIC IN MUD HOUSE
Deep into north Kashmir, Faheem Mir meet a small community that sings and lives on folk music but is facing a tense situation in the last few years
THE KABUL SPILLOVER?
Security experts are divided over the possible impact of the Kabul situation on Kashmir. But the dramatic Taliban triumph has altered the region’s geopolitics, for the time being, writes Riyaz Wani
Durga Bhawan At Katra
To enhancing facilities for the convenience of the Vaishno Devi pilgrims, Lt Governor Manoj Sinha laid the foundation for the Durga Bhawan, a high utility pilgrim-centric facility worth Rs 24.4 crore. The facility will accommodate 4000 pilgrims.
Women Empowerment
In the first, 480 talented girls from Jammu and Kashmir were included in the degree and diploma courses of the Pragati Scholarship. Jammu and Kashmir has also got nine scholarships under the Saksham Scheme for Persons with Disabilities.
‘SOME HISTORIANS BELIEVE THAT AFGHANISTAN CONFLICT IS THE OUTCOME OF INDIA AND PAKISTAN KASHMIR STAND-OFF'
Foreign policy expert and editor of HardNews magazine, Sanjay Kapoor believes that Taliban 2.0 has more legitimacy unlike in the past as it had signed a deal with the US and negotiated with other countries of the region, but the final verdict can be passed only after it manages ticklish issues involving half of its population, the women
Boredom Is Creative?
Getting bored is not as boring as it gets, writes Azra Hussain
LG In Bangus
Lt Governor, Manoj Sinha inaugurated the Bungus Awaam Mela amidst grand arrangements for village games, exhilarating local performances, and other activities to celebrate the 75th year of Independence.