05 July,2010 08:46 AM IST | | Anshuman G Dutta and Ali Yasir
Post ban on SMSes in the Valley, Kashmir agitators recoup on social networking site
The Kashmir government thought SMS was their last resort, but it wasn't. It only fuelled the fire of an ideology.
The aggressive protestors of the Valley, whose philosophy for every bullet of the troops is that with a stone, have now taken on social networking site to voice their dissent after the government banned the messaging service, thinking it will cut communication among the agitators. However, the state police are too busy to ignore the virtual world of networking.
Rocky road: Aggressive protests in the valley have become common in
recent times and protestors retort with stones to every bullet of securitymen.
Kaushur Haatyar Kann'e Jung (stone pelting), a community on Facebook, is bringing together young Kashmiris for whom stone-pelting has become a way of expressing their anger at the escalating situation in the Valley as well as targeting the security forces.u00a0u00a0u00a0
The community apart from highlighting the anti-agenda claims to have offices in Nowhatta, Maisuma, Sopore and Islamabad. It also identifies Jammu and Kashmir as "occupied Kashmir" like the various jihadi and Pakistani websites.
Official sources in the Kashmir police admitted that whatever success they had by banning the SMSes, Facebook has nullified it.
Goes a post on the community: "Kasheer Koshur: Kani jang is not a new experience for Kashmir and its people. For more than six decades, stone-pelting had been the ultimate weapon of Kashmiri anger at any point of conflict arising out of intimidation. In real sense resorting to stone throwing as a weapon for defence and defiance is manifestation of volcanic eruptions of extreme dissent. ..."
The Inspector of Police, Kashmir zone, Farooq Ahmad said the state police are under extreme duress, especially ever since the recent spate of violence has erupted in the Valley. "We don't have time for such things," Ahmad told MiD DAY when asked whether the state police has any mechanism in place to monitor the activities of the stone-pelters in the virtual world.
Jammu and Kashmir Home Secretary Samuel Verghese said, "I don't talk to mediapersons, I don't know."
In the recent months, stone-pelters have emerged as a major headache for the security forces in Kashmir, particularly the Central Reserve Police Force. The protests assumed alarming proportions after two youth were killed during firing by the CRPF personnel while controlling a protest in Baramulla.
Top security expert and former director of Intelligence Bureau (IB) Ajit Doval said the police could actually rein-in these elements, which have turned stones into a potential danger to the gun-wielding security forces, if they would monitor their activities on the Facebook.
"Since SMSes have been banned in the Valley, social networking sites have emerged as a major communication tools for stone-pelters."
On the same lines |
Apart from Kann'e Jung, there is another community on Facebook called All Kashmir Stone Pelters Association. The group description says, "This group is for those true kashmirs who want to show their anger for india. The so called democratic country has occupied us for the last six and so decades..Go one throw some more stone ...we have right to throw stones, if india gives us bullets cant we throw at least stones. Posts on the community page |
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Some of the posts on Kann'e Jung wall |
Ikram Ullah: we threaten indians not wid bullets but wid kann'e. |