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By Fahad Shah There is a rising tide of e-protest in Kashmir as the children of the Kashmir conflict make themselves heard through street graffiti, Facebook and YouTube
Change is the only constant. The struggle of Kashmir for independence from Indian rule is also changing as people shift their platform for protest as new media are made available. The Internet has become the podium for the new generation to express their support. It was not so popular earlier in the valley; today most of the people who don’t come on to the street to protest have taken the protests in everyone’s heart to social networking sites like Facebook and video bank YouTube. The movement of spontaneous protests over June-August 2010 is led by the children of the conflict, born after the rebellion movement started in the valley. On Facebook, many groups and pages which support the movement are filled with pro-freedom pictures, videos and posts. Members often raise a debate on any page or group to discuss how the current movement should be taken forward. Facebook has also become a fast means for circulating the latest news. The killing of 17-year-old student Tufail Ahmad Mattoo on June 11, 2010 while returning home from tuitions sparked widespread protests in valley which have left more than 45 people dead so far. Tufail was killed inside a football stadium when police were chasing some stone-throwers. Eyewitnesses say a policeman fired at him from close range, killing him on the spot. To express protest, Demilitarize KASHMIR, a Facebook page which has more than 1,000 members, posted on its wall: “It’s a painful appeal to all the Kashmiri brothers to stand UNITED against the forces trying to divide us and sabotage our Revolution...Remember UNITED we STAND...DIVIDED we FALL!!!” Despite a clampdown by the authorities on Facebook users who upload these kinds of posts, pictures or videos, e-protestors continue to spend hours on the Internet. In the Islamabad district of south Kashmir one user was called by the nearby police station to report at the station, claiming he was involved in anti-state activities on Facebook.  The contest for Kashmir goes viral. Some of the many dedicated Facebook pages Valley citizens who live outside the state in different parts of India and the rest of the world are also joining these e-protests. They say their absence from the valley makes them feel helpless when people are getting killed. The Internet seems to be the only medium for them to express anger over killings back home in the valley. Sam Walker, an unknown Facebook user and an e-protestor says, “I have a dream to live with justice, honour and peace. My brothers and sisters are sacrificing their lives for my dream. This makes me feel proud but I am sad too that I am not besides them on ground.” From social networking sites to the street, people of the valley have become keen participants in graffiti protests by sketching pro-freedom, anti-India slogans in graffiti on roadside walls, shop shutters, electricity poles, tree trunks, and roads, leaving no space which does not mark their protest. A graffiti protestor, Khaliq Khan (name changed on request), from a downtown area draws sketches on walls in spray paint. He says he wants to register his protest through every medium of communication. “We will use every medium to vent our anger.” I ask him if he feels under threat: “Yes, I feel scared of being caught someday but one has to struggle to achieve something,” he says, adding that the J&K police and Central Reserve Police Forces have erased most of his sketches by painting them black. “Last month I made nearly 60 sketches in the city but just four of them could survive,” he said. Many social networking sites like Facebook are dotted with messages like Leave our Kashmir’ and many quotes and poems related to death or war. Most activist Facebook users have changed their profile pictures to graphics displaying messages like ‘Saeni kasheer-ay kya baneov? Alvida saeni shaheedo!’ (What has become of our Kashmir? Farewell Oh martyrs!)’, ‘We may forget every crime of India in Kashmir but how can we forget the night when eight-year-old Yasmeena was raped thrice by troopers’. Continuing the curbs on freedoms the government banned Short Messaging Services (SMS) which added to the chaos and tension among the youth and led them towards the Internet to vent their anger. The ban was imposed by the state government on security grounds because people have been messaging each other regarding protests which the government says is “spreading false rumours”. The ban affected many people beyond the valley, such as Saqib Bhat (name changed), a photojournalist working in New Delhi, far from his close friend studying here in the valley. “SMS ban is a serious issue as the curfew keeps everyone jailed at home. We are even denied the right to express the pain of separation,” he said. (Fahad Shah is a freelance journalist based in Kashmir. This article originally appeared on openDemocracy.net in August 2010 under a Creative Commons licence) |