The Budgam incident has exposed unprofessional and lax approach of the security forces to deal with hecklers and stone-pelters
Brig Anil Gupta
The Indian media has been agog with the story on videosdepicting a group of CRPF personnel returning from polling duty being heckled, manhandled and abused by a few Kashmiri youth in Budgam area of Srinagar Parliamentary
constituency that went to poll on April 4. While the media has been full of praise for the restraint shown by the policemen, it is equally critical of the youth involved in heckling.
How the youth dared to behave like this with the men in uniform performing their duty ? The security forces are the nation’s sword arm in disturbed areas. They are deployed there to safeguard the local population, government property and national assets. They are mandated to ensure the nation’s sovereignty. It is also their responsibility to ensure that the nation’s writ runs in these areas and no one dares to take law in one’s hands. If this be so, the security forces deployed in these areas need to create fear so that no one dares to challenge their uthority.
There is no denying the fact that Pakistan is the sponsor and financer of the turmoil in Kashmir. But is it fair to blame Pakistan and put the matter to rest? Certainly not. Certain amount of introspection and internal audit is
needed to set our house in order.
The Budgam incident, no doubt, is condemnable but is only the youth to be blamed for that? It was the lack of fear of the security forces that emboldened the youth who dared to behave in the manner they did. A critical viewing of the video would reveal the total absence of combat discipline. It was astonishing to see the way the CRPF personnel were moving through a hostile area in an unorganised manner. Their carriage of loads and personal weapons was unprofessional to say the least. It is a complete failure of junior leadership and the CRPF hierarchy needs to take a serious note of it. If domestic loads were to be man carried, which in fact should have been carried in vehicles, the men should have been organised in two parties namely the load carrying party and an escort party. The absence of proper escort party was a sure recipe for inviting disaster.
One can simply imagine the extent of damage that would have been caused had terrorists used the opportunity to open fire after mingling with the crowd. The commanders up the chain have to train the personnel of Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) and instill confidence in them to shed the behaviour of a
law-enforcing policeman and behave like a combatant while operating in a combat zone. A combatant distinguishes himself with a smart turnout, perfect bearing, neat appearance, an alert eye, and above all, knowledge and application of minor tactics. Carriage of personal weapon in a manner that it can be used instantly if needed is equally important. All these clubbed together form the essential ingredients of combat discipline which needs to be imbibed by every combatant while operating in a hostile environment. Any laxity would lead to what was seen in the video. It won’t be wrong to summarise that it was lack of combat discipline that emboldened the youth to come in physical contact with the men on duty.
It would be unfair to assume that only the CRPF is being targeted. The stone-pelters have not spared the Army
personnel as well. Stone-throwing to enable
terrorists break the cordon or while the troops are busy in conduct of anti-terrorist operations has become a common phenomenon.
A few days earlier a video showing an attack on an army vehicle by the stone-pelters had also gone viral.
Another reason that has emboldened the Kashmiri youth is the judicial overreach and unwanted interference of the self-proclaimed human rights activists and the arm-chair peaceniks who take pleasure in issuing sermons from their air-conditioned habitats. The security forces are being denied the freedom to operate leading to lowering of the morale of rank and file. It defies all logic when stone-pelting law breakers are labelled as “innocent civilians” and the men in
uniform are given sermon to exercise restraint. The Supreme Court verdict of July 8 last year giving police the liberty to probe the role of the security forces involved in an encounter even in areas under the AFSPA has severely curtailed their freedom to operate.
The freedom of operation of the Army units and sub-units has been severely eroded by the list of dos and don’ts issued by the Supreme Court in 1997. The Supreme Court’s decision to intervene in the matter of weapon selection while dealing with stone-pelters has also emboldened them while at the same time causing a serious setback to the operational decision making capability of the security forces.
The unnecessary hysteria created by a section of the media against the use of pellet guns has also added to the confusion. Pellet gun is a non-lethal weapon and is used the world over for mob control.
Last, but not the least, is the indoctrination and
radicalisation of the youth. The Kashmiri youth is confused between politics and religion. Feeling let down and cheated by the
politicians, the youth is seeking solace in religion. The narrative in Kashmir has shifted from “Azadi” to “Nizam-e-Mustaffa”. In a video released by Hizbul Mujahedeen, the terrorist commander Zakir Musa has ordained the Kashmiri youth “to dismiss idea of nationalism and democracy and turn towards Islam.” The youth is being indoctrinated with Wahhabi ideology by fanatic Mullahs and the freely available Salafi literature on the social media. They are taught that it is the duty of Muslims to capture power and impose Sharia over entire J&K, starting with the Valley. Sharia disapproves the concept of democracy (equality for all) because as per Wahhabi ideology there cannot be equality between a man and a woman, a believer and non-believer (Kafir), master and a slave, a ruler and the subject.
Undoubtedly the Kashmiri youth is emboldened but at the same time he is disillusioned. He is seeking direction. He wants to be part of the national mainstream. He has to be freed from the clutches of fanatics and extremist
ideology through correct portrayal of true Islam. He has been indoctrinated with the violent philosophy of Islam while really speaking Islam is a religion of peace as well. According to many Muslim scholars Salm & Salam are the root words in Arabic for “Islam” which means peace and tranquility. Islam does not preach hatred but warns against “following the footsteps of Satan; for he is to you a clear enemy.”
Warning bells for the last and final time have been sounded for the
mainstream politicians. If they do not shake out of their deep slumber now and move out to the field to interact with the youth, they would lose whatever space is left for them in the complex matrix of power politics in the Valley. Even the civil society is expected to play a major role in restoring normalcy. A quick-fix solution is needed from the government to curb misuse of social media for promoting unrest.
The valley needs to resonate with these patriotic lines of Allama Iqbal, “Mazhav nahin sikhata aapis mein bair rakhna; ‘Hindi’ hai hum watan hai Hindustan hamara.”
(The writer is a Jammu-based political commentator, columnist, security and strategic analyst )
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