Afzal’s family snubs India’s offer to visit jail grave

Afzal’s family snubs India’s offer to visit jail grave
Updated 13 February 2013
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Afzal’s family snubs India’s offer to visit jail grave

Afzal’s family snubs India’s offer to visit jail grave

NEW DELHI: The family of a Kashmiri separatist who was executed at the weekend has rejected an offer by Indian authorities to pray at his graveside inside a prison, insisting the body be buried in his home state.
Home Secretary R.K. Singh made the offer yesterday and said that the belongings of Mohammed Afzal Guru, an Indian Muslim, who was executed and buried at Tihar Jail on Saturday, would be handed over to his family members.
“We have no problem if the immediate family of Afzal Guru wants to come and offer prayers at his grave in Tihar jail. Belongings of Afzal will be returned to the family,” Singh told reporters in Delhi.
However a relative of Guru said that the family had no intention of visiting his grave, insisting that the body be brought back to Kashmir.
“As Muslims we can pray for Afzal from here,” the separatist’s cousin Yasin Guru told AFP from the family’s hometown of Sopore in the Kashmir Valley.
“We will go to Tihar only if the government of India is kind enough to hand us his body for burial here.”
The announcement comes amid criticism of the government for failing to inform the family about the execution before he went to the gallows.
A letter sent from the government announcing that his mercy plea had been rejected only arrived at the family’s home on Monday morning.
Kashmir’s Chief Minister Omar Abdullah, normally an ally of the government, has been among those criticizing the handling of the execution, saying he found it “very difficult” to reconcile himself to the fact that Guru was not given the opportunity to see his family for the last time.
Guru was convicted of helping a group of militants to plot the 2001 attack on the Indian Parliament which left 10 people dead.
He always maintained his innocence and many of his supporters accused police of framing evidence against him in the case.
A curfew has been in place since Saturday throughout much of Kashmir, India’s only Muslim majority state.
There have also been protests on the Pakistani side of the de facto border which cuts through the disputed region, known as the Line of Control.
A burial plot, complete with a headstone, has been prepared for Guru in the so-called ‘Martyrs’ Graveyard’ in Srinagar, the main city in Indian-administered Kashmir.






The inscription reads: “His mortal remains are lying in trust with the government of India, the Kashmiri nation awaits its return,” according to an AFP photographer who has seen the tombstone.

Fears of new unrest
Anger and protests over the execution of a Kashmiri man convicted in a deadly attack on India’s Parliament have stirred fears the volatile Himalayan region could again descend into a cycle of violence after two years of relative peace.
Kashmir has been rocked by anti-India protests, despite a rigid curfew, since Mohammed Afzal Guru was hanged in New Delhi early Saturday. Three protesters have died so far in clashes with security forces.
Tens of thousands of troops patrolled the streets of Indian-controlled Kashmir yesterday, confining residents to their homes.
Shops, businesses and government offices were closed, streets ringed with barbed wire were deserted, and the region’s nearly 60 newspapers were unable to publish for a third day. Cable television and mobile Internet services were shut down in most areas.
Violent clashes and rigid curfews were long routine in Indian-held Kashmir, where insurgents have been fighting for more than two decades, demanding either a separate state or merger with Muslim-majority Pakistan. The region is divided between India and Pakistan and claimed in its entirety by both.
However, a slew of measures ranging from a harsh security crackdown to the government’s use of sports, economic development and culture to promote goodwill toward India have helped authorities maintain relative calm in Kashmir over the past two years. During that time, the region received a record number of tourists.
But the region remains a tinderbox, and many fear Guru’s execution could be the match that lights it. Many Kashmiris believe Guru did not get a fair trial, and the government’s surprise execution of the man — with his family only finding out afterward — only exacerbated the anger here.
“Please understand that there is more than one generation of Kashmiris that has come to see themselves as victims, that has come to see themselves as a category of people who will not receive justice,” Omar Abdullah, Indian Kashmir’s top elected official, told reporters.
“Whether you like it or not, the execution of Afzal Guru has reinforced that point that there is no justice for them, and that, to my mind, is far more disturbing and worrying than the short-term implications for the security front,” he said.
Separatist politicians called for a mass funeral prayer for Guru to be held Friday at a large square near Srinagar’s Martyr’s Graveyard, where hundreds of separatists and civilians killed in the conflict are buried.
“This hanging has magnified manifold the sense of alienation and dejection and has plunged Kashmir into new cycle of uncertainty,” said Sheikh Showkat Hussain, an international law professor at Central University of Kashmir. “This has also closed the doors of any reconciliation for those who wanted to be a bit moderate toward India.”
Unknown residents have, meanwhile, put up a tombstone as a mark over an empty grave for Guru in the main martyr’s graveyard in Srinagar. The epitaph reads: “His mortal remains are lying in trust with the government of India. Kashmiri nation awaits its return.”
Since 1989, an armed uprising in the region and an ensuing crackdown have killed an estimated 68,000 people, mostly civilians. But in recent years, as the uprising waned, Kashmiris took a different tack, taking to the streets to protest, often in response to an event that triggered anger across the region.
In 2008, a government decision — later revoked — to transfer land to a Hindu shrine set off a summer of protests.
The next year, the alleged rape and murder of two young women by security forces set off the violence.
In 2010, the trigger was a police investigation that accused soldiers of killing three civilians and then staging a fake gunbattle to make it appear the dead were militants.
In all three years, hundreds of thousands of young men took to the streets, hurling rocks and abuse at Indian forces.
In 2010 alone, 112 people were killed as troops fired live ammunition into the crowds, inciting further protests in a deadly cycle of violence.
Though the last two years have been relatively calm, the violence after Guru’s execution — with troops firing tear gas and bullets and using batons to chase away rock-throwing protesters — brought back memories from a time many here had hoped was over.
Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, a former Indian home minister who has also been the chief minister of Indian Kashmir, said Guru’s hanging was a “serious setback to peace.”
At least 40 separatist leaders and activists have been detained and put under house arrest to prevent them from leading anti-India protests, a police officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, a top separatist leader, told reporters in New Delhi that the hanging damaged hopes for any future negotiations with the government.