Poonch | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 08 May 2025 13:05:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Poonch | SabrangIndia 32 32 Poonch Victims: Civilians as targets of shelling https://sabrangindia.in/poonch-victims-civilians-as-targets-of-shelling/ Thu, 08 May 2025 13:05:49 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=41668 Four minors fell victim to the shelling while a hymn singer, tabla player, shopkeeper and homemaker were also killed and a gurdwara was also struck and suffered damage to its wall; hasty irresponsible reportage included slurring of an innocent civilian killed as a ‘terrorist’; preliminary reportage has counted the victims in Poonch alone to be 15 though numbers are expected to rise further

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Four minors were among the 15 persons identified as victim of cross border (read Pakistani) shelling in Poonch district of Jammu on May 7. While the Sikh community reeled in shock at the lives lost in the cross border shelling post May 7, the Gurudwara Nangal Sahib that was hit re-opened to devotees on the morning of May 8 itself. Besides, while both the traditional, entrenched legacy media post May 7 were full of triumphant details of India’s ‘targeted attacks’ on ‘terror camps’ across the border, it was social media that highlighted the human losses suffered in the Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir. Locals posted news and losses reported from Poonch to Akhnoor in the Jammu division which they say were being pounded by heavy artillery and mortar. There have been serious casualties and loss of life on the Indian side after civilian areas in Poonch town were the main targets of the Pakistani retaliation, something not seen earlier. By 7 p.m. yesterday, May 7, most of the population in Poonch town had fled towards Jammu.

While Poonch is reportedly the worst hit, several sectors in Kashmir Valley were also reportedly rocked by shelling. The Indian Army confirmed that a soldier had died on Wednesday. “GOC and all ranks of White Knight Corps salute the supreme sacrifice of L/Nk Dinesh Kumar of 5 Fd Regt, who laid down his life on May 7 during Pakistan Army shelling. We also stand in solidarity with all victims of the targeted attacks on innocent civilians in Poonch sector,” the 16 Corps, Indian Army, posted on X.An unconfirmed list of other civilians killed by Pakistani shelling (totalling 15) – published by Maktoob Media includes: Balvinder Kaur alias Ruby (aged 33), Mohd Zain Khan (aged 10 years), Zoya Khan (12), Mohd Akram (40), Amrik Singh (55), Mohd Iqbal (45), Ranjeet Singh (48), Shakeela Bi (40), Amarjeet Singh (47), Maryam Khatoun (7), Vihaan Bhargav (13), Mohd Rafi (40) and three identified.

The local Sikh community suffered a heavy loss as at least four of its members were killed and the wall of a gurdwara was damaged when Pakistan reportedly launched heavy shelling early Wednesday in the Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir. Eyewitnesses described the intensity of the bombardment as worse than during the 1999 Kargil War. Social media first reported that according to officials, Amreek Singh and Ranjit Singh—local shopkeepers—ex-army official Amarjeet Singh, and homemaker Ruby Kaur were killed instantly when a shell exploded near them, sending shockwaves through the community.

Meanwhile, the family of Mohammad Iqbal, who was killed in the shelling at Poonch, and who worked as a teacher at the Jamia Zia Ul Uloom has taken strong objection at news channels ABP News, Zee News and TV 18 for dubbing the slain victim as a ‘terrorist.’ They have urged the Poonch District Collector and the Poonch police to also initiate action, and have now been reported to have decided to initiate legal action against the errant channels themselves.

On May 7, the shelling took the roofs of Amreek Singh’s shop reducing it to rubble while the nearby gurudwara, Nangali Sahib was also struck during the shelling. Situated in the lap of a picturesque hill on the banks of the Drungali Nallah, it is situated about four kilometres from Poonch town and in Poonch distrct in the Jammu region. It is also recognised as one of the oldest shrines for the Sikhs in northern India.

Amarjeet Singh (50), a devout Granthi who regularly performed Paath at the gurdwara is a former army person who, died in the shelling. He is survived by his wife, a son in Class 6, and a daughter. Amarjeet Singh also played the tabla at the gurdwara, while another victim, Amreek Singh, was a raagi who sang hymns from the Guru Granth Sahib at another gurdwara in Poonch. Both were killed at different locations.

Amreek Singh (39) also ran a small grocery shop below his house. He was the sole breadwinner of his family and is survived by two daughters and a son. He was with Ranjit Singh at Syndicate Chowk when a shell exploded in front of them, reported Indian Express. Both died on the spot. Amreek Singh had gone to open his shop. Meawnhile, Ruby Kaur (32), a homemaker, was killed in Mankote. She had three children, the youngest just a year and a half old.

The local Sikh population in Poonch, is estimated between 25,000 and 30,000, has been left shaken. “We have never witnessed such heavy shelling in Poonch before. We saw the Kargil war, but civilian establishments largely remained untouched. We thought we had learned to live under shelling. Today, that illusion was broken,” said Narinder Singh.

Following the incident, Giani Kuldeep Singh Gargaj, Acting Jathedar of Sri Akal Takht Sahib, condemned the shelling. “The attack on Gurdwara Sri Guru Singh Sabha and the loss of Sikh lives is not just an event—it is a blow to humanity,” he said. He has also called for diplomacy, Jathedar Gargaj urged both India and Pakistan to reduce tensions. “Both governments must act with wisdom, not weapons,” he said. “Since 1947, this conflict has caused suffering, including to Hindus and Sikhs near the border. How many more must pay for a conflict they did not create?” asked Gargaj. “War always devours the innocent. Peace is not weakness—it is the strength we must summon.”


Related:

Homes Destroyed, Mass Detentions Following Pahalgam Attack

A Tranquil Paradise Shattered: The Pahalgam terror attack

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A Revolt Simmers in Poonch, Where Children Grow up Under the Shadow of War https://sabrangindia.in/revolt-simmers-poonch-where-children-grow-under-shadow-war/ Tue, 24 Sep 2019 05:10:19 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/09/24/revolt-simmers-poonch-where-children-grow-under-shadow-war/ The Muslim majority district, with proximity to LoC, is not new to a ‘war-like’ existence. It has always held the tricolour high, but this time things are different.     Poonch: The shops are open, and the roads are busy. The schools are functioning normally. People are busy with daily work. There are no restrictions […]

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The Muslim majority district, with proximity to LoC, is not new to a ‘war-like’ existence. It has always held the tricolour high, but this time things are different.
 
Poonch
 
Poonch: The shops are open, and the roads are busy. The schools are functioning normally. People are busy with daily work. There are no restrictions and no shutdown is visible. On the surface, the situation appears fine, but beneath this veneer of normalcy lives a disgruntled population of Poonch, harbouring a deep grudge as if a revolt is seething. 

A vast mountainous region, Poonch is located along the treacherous Pir Panjal range where villages are scattered widely along slopes as rivers and streams flow in deep ravines. A Muslim majority district with over 90% Muslim population, life in Poonch is not easy due to the difficult terrain. The earth is tough with limited scope for agriculture, people grow maize mostly and only a few patches are good for beans, apples and pears. 

What makes life in Poonch most complicated is its proximity with the Line of Control (LoC), many villages on this side are always in the line of fire from Pakistani posts, perched atop the mountain range. The ceasefire violations along the LoC are a regular feature in these regions, manned by military posts on both sides. 

More than 45 days have passed since Article 370 was abrogated in Jammu and Kashmir, ripping apart its state status and bifurcating it into two Union territories – Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh. A massive clampdown was enforced across the erstwhile state, hundreds, including politicians, activists, lawyers and students have been arrested. 

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For people in Poonch, a crackdown of this scale has been imposed for the first time, locals say. The government placed Poonch under curfew for 10 days before lifting restrictions in the area, except in Tehsil Mandi, where it continued for a few more days. 

Less than a month ago, 21-year-old Aftab was preparing for further studies following his graduation from Poonch degree college. A resident of Rajpora village in Mandi, around 21 km from Poonch town, he has lost all focus since his father Altaf Hussain was slapped with the Public Safety Act (PSA) earlier this month. 

“I can’t say much. He hasn’t done anything to deserve jail,” says Aftab, adding “He didn’t do anything when he was young, what will he do now in old age”. 

Altaf Hussain retired as a government schoolteacher earlier in March this year. He has four daughters and Aftab, who is the eldest. To sustain his family, Aftab also works as a salesman in a nearby medicine shop and avoids discussing politics because he aspires to be a journalist. He, however, shivers as he talks about his father’s detention.  

Altaf Hussain is among nine persons arrested in Poonch and slapped with PSA. The police arrested five from Mandi area, two from Surankote, one from Poonch town and another one from Mendhar. According to police, the five persons from Mandi. including Altaf, have been booked for raising pro-freedom slogans, such as  lHum kya chahate hain, Azadi, Hai haq hamara Azadi… Abrogation 370/35A humein Manzoor Nahi, Manzoor Nahi (We want freedom, freedom is our right…Abrogation of Article 370/35A is unacceptable). 

Javaid Reshi, Mohd Farooq, Mohd Din, Mohd Akram and Shahid Hussain, among others, have also been named as associates of Altaf in instigating people. Aftab says, his father is lodged in Kot Balwal jail outside Poonch. A few locals have gone underground to evade arrests. 
Shameem Ganie, a political activist with People’s Democratic Party (PDP), says despite insurgency in Kashmir, people in Poonch always waved and stood by the Indian flag on Republic day and Independence Day. “This time on August 15 no one from Mandi participated in the celebrations,” he says.

After the government ended restrictions, Mandi locals began observing a shutdown, but the police and local administration carried out arrests in the area, forcing locals to open the market. “But our hearts have already revolted,” locals say. 

Shameem says the recent crisis has hit his belief in the politics he espoused for years. He says he never let the ‘shadowy policies of Pakistan’ take root either in his heart or in his land. “Now I think the belief of our ancestors was wrong, as the belief of Mohammad Ali Jinnah, the two-nation theory, appears right,” he adds.

Like Shameem, former Poonch MLA, Shah Mohammad Tantray, is also hurt. “I was and will remain an Indian but unlike the past, I am not a proud Indian anymore,” says the PDP leader. 

Tantray is currently under house arrest and his movement has been restricted since August 5, like scores of other politicians in the Valley. For Tantray, the only response from his side and his people, is to be patient. “There is darkness and hopelessness due to Ananiyat, Lakanooniyat and Firouniyat (Betrayal, Lawlessness and Tyranny),” Tantray says. He says he has been put under detention, as he is a vocal critic of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s policies. 

Both Shameem and Tantray believe the decision to revoke the special status of J&K and downgrade its status into Union territories has undone years of work carried out by local pro-India politicians in Poonch. “We are back to square one just like in the 1990s, when armed insurgency swept the entire region into violence and revolt,” Shameem says. 

The fear of a possible escalation in Kashmir insurgency is also rooted in Poonch. Its proximity with the LoC (Line of Control) and vast swathes of uninhabited territory in Poonch region, acts as a favourable route for infiltration bids. Many of these routes lead to the upper reaches of Baramulla, Budgam and Shopian districts in Srinagar. 

But, for many locals of Poonch, more than the abrogation of Article 370, it is the removal of Article 35-A and downgrading of J&K to a Union territory as hurt them most. 

Ghulam Qadir, a resident of Rajpora, believes no one will come and buy their land but educating children for jobs will yield them even less than what the land of Poonch yields in crops. “No one is happy. There were already less opportunities for our kids, now there will be none,” he says. In the last elections, 60-year-old Ghulam Qadir says he voted on a party’s promise that special status will remain unharmed. 

Ghulam Qadir has three sons, one of them, a post-graduate, works as a help in Saudi Arabia. His other son is a daily wager in the local panchayat. “My youngest son, looking at the plight of his elder brothers, decided against studies and went to Shimla (Himachal Pradesh) to work as a labour. Now more will be like my youngest son. But there is nothing we can do, as it is a border area,” he adds. 

On this side of the LoC, a gun point is perched in the remote Gagriya village and right above its range is Gagriya high school, around 48 km from the town. It is the last high school in the area where 232 students are enrolled, including 110 girls. The fence along the LoC is clearly visible from the school’s courtyard. 

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“The shelling can happen anytime and there is a continuous threat, but locals are enthusiastic about educating their children,” Vikas Luthra, who teaches in the school, told NewsClick. 

Khursheed Ahmad, a student of Class 9, has to walk uphill for 45 minutes to reach the school. An aspiring engineer, his father used to work in a Gulf country but left his job two years ago. Khursheed’s nomadic tribe migrates from season to season in different areas of the region but, he never misses school. 

“My parents want me to become an engineer, but my father insists on going to Saudi Arabia for work like him,” Khursheed says.  

His teacher Mohammad Aslam says it is difficult for people living in cities and towns to understand how difficult it is to get educated in a border area like Gagriya. “This place is under snow for months and the summers are not very kind and then there is a life threat. How will a student of Gagriya compete with someone educated in Srinagar or Delhi,” he points-out, referring to the removal of Article 35A as ‘injustice’ to children like Khursheed. 

People living in Gagriya mostly speak a Kashmiri dialect like many others in Poonch region where nomadic tribes also speak Pahari and Gojri. People in Poonch identify themselves as Kashmiris. The travel time to Gagriya from Srinagar is a nine-hour rigorous drive from Shopian-Mughal Road, but on the western side, it is a five-hour walk from the Valley’s Baramulla district, according to locals, but there is no road connectivity, which makes villages like Gagriya, and Saujian in the vicinity, the remotest areas in the region. 

While mobile phone networks in J&K started operations almost 15 years ago, residents of Gagriya until a year ago relied on wireless landline services only. Within a year, villagers in this area witnessed the first mobile network shutdown, a regular feature for people living in the rest of the state. 

“We now have one private mobile network in this area and this reminded us that we are not living too far from Kashmir Valley even as we may do so physically,” a local says. 

The villager say they have always been sympathetic to Kashmiris in the valley and look up to them for representation. 

Choudhary Abdul Ghani, a Congressman from Poonch, says for the people in Poonch, the social and political realities vary from those living away from it. “People living in border areas put up a fight everyday to survive. There are hundreds of issues, but there is a deep sense of loss among people in Poonch, irrespective of religion, creed or tribe,” he says. 

Before Independence, according to historian Christopher Snedden, due to less agricultural practices and tough terrain, about 60,000 persons from Poonch, due to their proximity with military grounds in Punjab, fought in World War II in the British Army. A rebellion led by ex-army servicemen called ‘Poonch Rebellion’ ensued in year 1947, which became a precursor to the first war fought by India and Pakistan over the region. The erstwhile Poonch Jagir is now divided by the LoC, with relatives and families living on either side of the divide. 

Shameem, the influential PDP activist, says even as there is a worry in the entire world about the possibility of a war in the sub-continent, the worries in Poonch have not increased. “The wars never left us,” he says. 

Despite massive security presence and crackdown in the area, locals from the border region carried out small demonstrations in several places, including in Gagriya, where young men chanted pro-freedom slogans and slogans against the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party at the Centre, the party they think is “responsible for creating a new front in an old war.”

Courtesy: Newsclick.in
 

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J&K High Court issues notice to govt. and CBI on the killing of 19 civilians in Poonch district https://sabrangindia.in/jk-high-court-issues-notice-govt-and-cbi-killing-19-civilians-poonch-district/ Tue, 21 Nov 2017 08:12:16 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/11/21/jk-high-court-issues-notice-govt-and-cbi-killing-19-civilians-poonch-district/ Srinagar: As the wait for family members of Sailan massacre for justice enters the 19th year, the Jammu and Kashmir High Court on Friday, November 17, 2017, admitted a petition filed by the family members of the victims seeking further investigations in this case. On the intervening night of 3/4 August 1998, 19 civilians were […]

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Srinagar: As the wait for family members of Sailan massacre for justice enters the 19th year, the Jammu and Kashmir High Court on Friday, November 17, 2017, admitted a petition filed by the family members of the victims seeking further investigations in this case.

On the intervening night of 3/4 August 1998, 19 civilians were shot to death at point-blank range in their homes in Sailan village of Surankote Tehsil of district Poonch by four Special Police Officers (SPOs) and personnel of the 9 Para commando battalion. Jammu and Kashmir police officers, including the then Superintendent of Police (Poonch), J.P Singh, were also implicated in the crime and cover-up.

The filing of petition comes after a CBI court in Jammu earlier this year in August had accepted the CBI investigations that declared the victim families as being untruthful and sought closure of this case.

The High Court has issued a notice to the government and CBI to respond.

In September 1998, the government had ordered State Human Rights Commission for spot visit to Sailan village to probe into the killings and the SHRC team in its findings confirmed the role of local policemen and the troopers of 9 Para into the killings.

“It is not difficult but easy to draw conclusion how the occurrence of killing took place and who is responsible for the same. While lifting the dead body of Zakir, SPO army had vowed to wipe twenty persons even before his burial,” SHRC said in its report.

“One glaring fact noted when bloodbath of 19 persons taking place in the house of Ahmad Din, the army picket being only 200 meters away, the army supposed to be vigilant around the clock did not come on the spot to intervene when civilians had been ordered not to move after 6:30 pm. The silence of army by that time of occurrence is not meaningless, uniformed personnel seen moving with torchlight around the scene of occurrence then moving down to board the vehicles or on the main road, leaving none in doubt except bias mind,” the report added.

But even after this damning report, the case stayed in limbo until 2011, when the victim families filed a petition in the Jammu High Court and the court in November 2012 handed over the case to CBI.

Disposing of the petition filed by the victim families seeking the investigation by a Special Investigation Team of the CBI, the Court of Muzaffar Hussain Attar had directed CBI to take over the case for investigation.

“It is provided that CBI will take the matter for investigation and conduct the probe in accordance with law and ensure that justice is meted out to the petitioners,” the court had said.

In September 2015, three years after taking over the investigations, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has pleaded that Sailan massacre case should be closed.

“The order of 25 August 2017 has been challenged as the CBI court ignored material evidence and its decision is arbitrary and findings perverse. The order has resulted in a serious miscarriage of justice,” Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS) said in a statement.

“The CBI court accepted the conclusions of the CBI and failed to appreciate the detailed submissions made by the family members of the victims that clearly indict the State forces for the crime and emphasize the need for further investigations that would lead to a charge sheet and a successful prosecution.”

JKCCS further said, “Three eye-witnesses, all family members of the victims, accuse the 4 SPO’s, and Major Gaurav Rishi, for their involvement in the massacre. Further, the CBI court was made aware of 12 witnesses who have vital evidence that support the case but the CBI court in its order does not even refer to this point.”

“Since 1998, the families of the victims have waged a struggle for justice before the State Human Rights Commission, J&K High Court, CBI court and now back before the high court,” it added.

This story was first published on TwoCircles.
 

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