1965: A war

1965: A WAR

A TRIBUTE TO THE NATION'S HEROES

Chronicles of insurmountable defence

Information from the 1965 war archives reveal how the conflict unfolded day by day

Our Correspondent
Karachi

As sudden as India’s failed 1965 offensive against Pakistan was, the build-up leading to it had been underway for much of the year. New Delhi had been creating war hysteria as early as April that year, and had positioned its troops close to the Pakistan border. Around two months later, in June, the Pakistan Air Force intercepted a trespassing Indian Air Force Ouragan fighter jet, forcing it to land near Badin. 

Meanwhile, the Indian government had initiated a campaign of harassment aimed at Pakistanis who visited India. Seven Pakistanis were arrested in Kanpur on flimsy grounds by Indian authorities, even though they had been visiting their relatives with all required valid documents.

The incident came after then Indian defence minister Y B Chavan admitted that the Indian army had been finding it ‘very difficult’ to stifle the struggle of Mujahideen in Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).  

Set on a collision course

On Sept 1, Indian forces attempted to build up pressure in the Rajauri, Mandi, Sona Marg and Srinagar sectors. According to India’s own account, its forces suffered heavy losses and humiliation at the hands of Azad troops.

Then information minister of Pakistan, Khawaja Shahabuddin, issued India a warning: if its forces continued aggressive actions across the ceasefire line in Kashmir, Pakistani forces would have no choice but to retaliate. His words went unheeded.

At 5:19 pm, four IAF Vampire fighter jets took off from Pathankot and entered Pakistani airspace to attack Pakistani ground troops. To their utter surprise, the intruders were welcomed by two PAF F-86 Sabres. All four Indian aircraft were shot down in an episode so demoralising for the IAF that withdrew all 130 Vampires from frontline service.

Admitting the loss the next day, Indian PM Lal Bahadur Shastri continued making threats towards Pakistan. Responding to the provocations, then president Ayub Khan addressed the nation. “Indian policy towards Pakistan and Kashmir from the very beginning had been set on a collision course,” he said, as he warned Delhi it would be alone responsible for consequences. The GHQ ordered all formations to occupy concentration areas if hostilities escalated.

In 1965, the Indian military seriously outnumbered Pakistan armed forces. India had three times the strength in terms of numbers when it came to infantry, air force and navy.  Even so, India’s military performance did not live up to its strength on paper. On September 2, Kashmiri mujahids wiped out an entire Indian platoon while assaulting Indian positions, convoys and military installations. Azad Kashmir Forces, with support from the Pakistan Army, also pressed ahead unchecked in the Chhamb, taking 150 POWs and capturing 15 Indian tanks.

On Sept 3, Shastri addressed his nation again. Fearing that Pakistan could launch its own air raids, he told the people of India to brace for hard days. 

Meanwhile, a senior Pakistan Army officer single-handedly captured 30 Indian soldiers. Armed with just a pistol, Lt-Col Naseerullah Babar mistakenly landed his helicopter at an Indian position in Bhimbher. However, Displaying exceptional presence of mind, he convinced the enemy troops that it was they who were surrounded.

The day also saw another intense air battle that resulted in three out of six intruding IAF aircraft shot down. A fourth was forced to land at the Pasrur airfield and only two intruders made it back home.

On Sept 4, India revealed its true intent. The country’ foreign minister, Indira Gandhi, announced: “ India wants a showdown… to settle the Kashmir issue once and for all.”

The GHQ directed all Pakistani formations to take defensive measures. In the Jurian sector, a platoon commanded by 2nd Lieutenant Shabbir Sharif charged a strongly held enemy position again and again. His third attempt broke through enemy lines, and he was awarded the Sitara-e-Jurrat for his leadership and courage.

The PAF, meanwhile, drove back 40 Indian warplanes as they attempted to intrude Pakistani airspace. To ward off any Indian threat from the seas, Pakistan also deployed its first long range submarine, PNS Ghazi. 

After a night of fierce fighting, the Jurrian sector fell to Pakistani forces under Maj-Gen Akthar Malik on Sept 5. The victory also brought Pakistani troops within three miles from Akhnur, another vital point for Indian forces. At the same time, PNS Ghazi was in position to attack Indian Navy cruiser INS Mysore and its escorts. 

‘Full scale war’

On September 6, Shastri declared ‘full-scale war with Pakistan’. At 0400 hours, Indian forces crossed the border, launching attacks on Lahore, Sialkot and Kasur.

Pakistani troops repulsed the three-pronged Indian attack, inflicting heavy casualties. At Wagah and Bedian, a number of Indian soldiers were captured, and several Indian tanks and artillery positioned at the Lahore front were destroyed. 

As Jassar, from where India launched the Sialkot offensive, Pakistani troops dislodged Indian troops from a Ravi river enclave. As many as 200 Indian soldiers were confirmed to have died in the battle, with unofficial estimates suggesting an actual toll as high as 800. 

India suffered a crushing defeat at Chhamb as well, with 35 Indian soldiers made POWs and several Indian tanks and artillery cannons captured. 

The PAF launched a daring airstrike on Pathankot Air Base, annihilating 22 Indian warplanes on the ground. 

Pakistan forces pushed the invaders back the next day, inflicting heavy losses. The PAF also destroyed another 31 Indian warplanes. The Indian spokesperson was forced the admit the offensive was halted, but threatened to open a front on East Pakistan.

Driven to desperation, Indian forces launched attacks on non-military installation on Sept 8. IAF targeted hospitals and courts in Wazirabad, Chiniot, Sargodha and Sialkot, while India dropped paratroopers near Rawalpindi, Lahore, Shahdara, Wazirabad, Jhelum, Sukkur, Badin and Karachi. The airborne troops, however, lacked conviction to fight and were taken captive. 

Pakistan Army, meanwhile, repulsed another Indian attack on Lahore, Sialkot and the country’s desert regions, knocking out 21 Indian tanks.

PNS Ghazi took the fight to Indian shores, destroying a radar station at Dwarka. Meanwhile, PAF bombers carried out accurate raids on IAF bases at Halwara and Jodhpur, reducing India’s air strength by a fifth.

India in disarray

By Sept 9, India appeared in disarray. A serious rift emerged between its PM and president, and Delhi ordered the arrest of 500 Pakistani visitors in hubris. 

Pakistan continued to push Indian troops behind the border, with decisive blows at Wagah, Kasur, Sialkot and Gadaro. The PAF, meanwhile, maintained complete air superiority, destroying 28 IAF warplanes in dogfights, 26 in air raids and two using AA guns. The PNS Ghazi kept the Indian Navy from reacting the loss at Dwarka.

India’s defence minister accepted severe armour losses on Sept 10 and admitted Indian troops had been pushed back from Kasur. The PAF shot down two more IAF planes over Lahore, the ever-increasing losses dividing the Indian government into two camps. India began air raids in East Pakistan.

On September 11, Pakistani forces launched a swift limited offensive against Indian troops poised for another attack on Kasur and Lahore. After fierce fighting Pakistani troops captured Khem Karan, before fighting back a desperate Indian counter attack. 

Pakistani forces also halted an Indian advance on the Hariki-Burki road, and captured positions in the Chhamb-Akhnur and Sindh-Rajasthan sectors. As many as 36 Indian tanks were knocked in the Sialkot sector.  The PAF, meanwhile, destroyed the entire Indian MiG-21 fleet at Halwara, and two fighter-bombers at the Bagh Dogra airbase in West Bengal.

Between Sept 11 and 12, India launched eight major attacks in the Lahore sector and the heaviest tank offensive in the Sialkot sector. Despite encountering heavy fire from tanks, Maj Aziz Bhatti continued to direct artillery and embraced martyrdom, as the troops he commanded held firm. He was honoured with the Nishan-e-Haider.

In the Sialkot sector, Pakistani forces destroyed 45 enemy tanks and captured many posts in Sulemanki. Similarly, Pakistani troops captured a post well inside Indian territory in Chhamb sector. As many as 350 Indian soldiers surrendered in Khem Karan as well.

Dominating the battlefields

On Sept 13, Pakistan Army pushed back an Indian advance and captured the Munabao railway station. Pakistani troops also repulsed Indian attacks in the Sialkot sector with heavy losses. In the air, PAF shot down six IAF cargo planes and a Gnat fighter.

Another Indian attack in the Lahore sector was repulsed the next day, and the enemy fled leaving 150 dead and 300 wounded behind. Pakistani troops captured another post in the Gadaro sector and continued to shell Indian positions in the Sialkot-Jammu sector.

Indian launched another attack in the Sialkot sector on Sept 15, but encountered more heavy losses. PAF continued to pound Indian forces from the air, destroying 22 tanks and 51 vehicles.

On Sept 16, Pakistani troops, supported by PAF, halted Indian attacks in the Sialkot-Jammu and Wagah-Attari sectors. India lost 36 tanks in the failed offensive. In the Gadaro sector, Pakistan troops continued to push ahead well inside Indian territory. Separately, the PAF shot down two IAF Hunter jets. 

On Sept 17, IAF warplanes targeted a civilian train, killing 20 Pakistani passengers in the cowardly attack. Meanwhile, Pakistani troops continued to dominate Indian forces in Khem Karan, Sialkot and Chhamb. Over the next five days, Indian forces continued to suffer heavy losses to sustained pressure from Pakistan Army and Air Force.

On Sept 18, Pakistani troops took over the Rajput fort of Kishengarh in Rajasthan. On Sept 20, PAF bombers carried out more accurate strikes on IAF bases in Ambala, Jodhpur, Jammu, Jamnagar and Halwara.

On Sept 22, President Ayub announced Pakistan had accepted the UN ceasefire resolution, which Indian PM Shastri to called a ‘sigh of relief’ for Indian forces. Even so, India launched last ditch attacks in the Wagah-Attari and Khem Karan sectors the next day, but failed to make any gains as Pakistani forces held firm in defence.

National spirit

Looking back on Pakistan’s greatest strength

Where artillery and infantry are significant to wars, the secret to Pakistan’s success in 1965 was its leadership and unity

Khalid Mehmood
Islamabad

A nation divided is perhaps on the shortest end of any war. It has little chances of winning against its foes, when it is struggling to win over its own people. In retrospect, the Islamic Republic’s greatest advantage in the Indo-Pakistan war was not the scale of its artillery or the numbers in its infantry. It was its ability to bring the nation under a single, united front. Five-and-a-half decades later, as border tensions grow, the country is once again in need of the same national spirit of unanimity that it had coursing through its veins on the eve of 6 September 1965.

  “India had already blitzed into Azad Kashmir, where a majority of our troops were engaged. Later, seeing the opportunity, they also attacked Chamb Jooriyan and then set their sight on Lahore. We were ambushed from all sides and the enemy was eyeing an entry into Lahore through the Wazirabad Rad. However, that is when Pakistan turned from a country into a nation united. Our naval forces went some 1349.9 nautical miles into Indian Territory and hit a significant target, beating India in its own game,” recalled Lieutenant General (rtd) Khalid Lodhi. “If one reads through the pages of history, there is a lot that we can learn from Pakistan’s victory in 1965,” he added.

 On the other hand, speaking to The Express Tribune General Talat Masood said that while national spirit is imperative, it is equally important for a country to be equipped with state-of-the-art defense machinery in today’s day and age. “Undoubtedly, there was terrific leadership and intelligence back then, which primarily enabled Pakistan to win against all odds. Although we still retain a brilliant intelligence and the mightiest of forces, but even after 55 years Pakistan has struggled to maintain adequate finances. The word around us has progressed but are still strapped for cash and dependent on foreign nations for aid, which can prove unfavorable in times of crisis.”

 According to the military veteran, the county is in dire need of improving its economy, now more than ever, that the vision of war has changed. “In 1965, the spirit of patriotism was still fresh from the days of partition. People back then, be they military or civilians, knew firsthand what freedom meant and the struggles went into achieving it. Today, we are far ahead in terms of artillery, infantry and leadership. All we need is financial independence and the same spirit of nationalism that we experienced in 55 years ago.”

 Harking back to the events of 1965, Pakistan Army veteran General (rtd) Mustufa shared that he was a 10th grade student when the word of war first spread. “My father was a military man, so I experienced the war unravel before my own eyes. Back then, the army was the artillery and it was in fact the entire nation that was collectively fighting to defend its borders from enemy forces. There wasn’t an ounce of fear, we all trusted each other the utmost,” he recalled. “Although we were in the midst of a blitz, all ground-traffic, aircrafts and trains remained functional as per routine. We had limited weapons, and yet our air force managed to shoot down some 114 enemy aircrafts while the navy hammed the final nail in the enemy’s coffin in Chaunda. Today, our country needs to unite once again and stand firm under a single vision as we did in 1965. Our unity, is still our greatest strength.”

When Indian military paid for its hubris

Kashmiri leader urges Pakistan to respond decisively to all threats 

Our Correspondent
Karachi

Pakistani troops marched into Indian territory, east of Lahore. They pushed the Indian army across the border at Wagah, completely decimating their opponent’s morale.  The move sent shock waves all the way to New Delhi and beyond. 

More than five decades later, each year, on 6 September, the Indian leadership is reminded of the resounding defeat it faced at the hands of Pakistan’s armed forces. While India has made several attempts to scrub history, Pakistan continues to commemorate the victory loudly. The war ended with an UN-sponsored ceasefire.  The conflict, like all others that have happened since then, was fought over Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

In the occupied territory of Kashmir, Pakistan Army’s approval ratings have been high ever since. No attempts to dilute the history, by the Indian regime has ever succeeded. 

“As a Kashmiri representative, I would say India must see how powerful Pakistan is as a nation and as a military force. It must learn from its mistakes,” cautioned Altaf Ahmad Bhat, convener of Jammu and Kashmir Salvation Movement (JKSM). 

Recalling the details of the 1965 battle, Bhat said: “India can try all it wants, but the power and vigor of a Mujahid will always remain unmatched.”

During the conflict that lasted barely a month, Pakistan made gains in the Rajasthan desert. It captured a significant portion of territory and caused massive loss to the Indian army.  Since then, Pakistan celebrates 6 September every year as "Defence Day" with a 21-gun salute and a grand parade.

Bhat said instead of learning a lesson, India continues to try its luck, and each time, it receives a stinging blow.  “In 1965, India made a mistake, it repeated the same mistake recently by claiming it had attacked Pakistani territory in Balakot. And the rest is history,” said the Kashmiri leader. 

“India fails to learn from its mistakes,” quipped Bhat, who openly criticizes the Modi regime for its actions in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir. 

Bhat said India should revisit history and review the performance of Pakistan’s military and air force. “The Pakistani air force was fully charged, and Indian side was unable to handle it,” he said. 

The Kashmiri leader urged Pakistan’s military to respond decisively to any and all threats by India. He said India, under Modi, is only good at sabre-rattling, and nothing more. “Pakistan has one of the top trained military and India needs to know that before it plans its next military misadventure,” said the Kashmiri leader.

“Pakistan’s military must respond with full force once again to free Kashmir from the oppressive regime’s control,” urged Bhat. 

In a direct warning to India, Bhat said, “Pakistan is an atomic power and a strong Muslim nation. India can never match that power,” he said. 

Reminding India of the 1965 defeat, Bhat said, New Delhi must resolve the Kashmir issue as per the UN resolution that its leaders agreed. Otherwise, he said, India must prepare for another defeat and perhaps a regional war.



A vivid recollection of the 1965 War

People who survived the War remember the events that took place after the attack

Asif Mehmood
Lahore

Even after more than five decades, elderly people living in the border areas of Lahore still remember the events of the Pakistan-India War of 1965.

During the war, most of the area situated east of Lahore, from the Bambanwala-Ravi-Bedian (BRB) Canal to the border, was under Indian occupation but the Pakistan Army challenged the enemy despite their battalion being significantly bigger in number. After the defeat, the Indian Army had to perform the last rites of their dead soldiers on the Pakistani soil. 

The Bhasin area of Lahore is located only a few kilometres close to the Pak-India border. The area was occupied by India during the 1965 Pak-India War, but only a day later, the Pakistan Army successfully recaptured the village. According to native elders of the area, firing started at 3 AM.

Recalling the day the war broke out, Abdul Ghafoor, an elder, said that when the firing started, he thought that the Rangers might be chasing smugglers.

“When the firing began to escalate, we realised that war had broken out. At first, the Pakistani planes responded to the Indian Army. Our planes dropped bombs on the Kanjari Bridge in India which had caused considerable damage to the enemy," he recalled.

Another elder, Mohammad Sadiq, said that he was about 13 years of age at the time of the 1965 war. “I remember that my mother woke all of us up 4 AM when the Indian Army attacked us. It was prayer time,” he said. 

To respond to the Indian aggression, the Pakistan Army first damaged the bridge of the BRB Canal so that the Indian Army could not cross it. Those who remained on the other side of the canal were then taken to the other side by the soldiers.

Mohammad Sadiq said that most of the elders, women and children of the village had crossed the bridge successfully. Only some young boys were left behind who were assisting the Pakistan Army.

“They were mostly doing the legwork, like pick up boxes of bullets for the soldiers, bringing them food, or water. My siblings also told me that there was vast open space in the Bhasin area where the Mayo Community. All fallen soldiers of the Indian Armed Forces were cremated there.”

Muhammad Ahmad Khan, who was also a young boy in 1965, said that the war was over after 17 days but they returned to their homes after about nine months. 

"Everything was destroyed. We lost our houses, shops, school. Nothing was left,” Ahmad Khan recalled. “The Indian Army even destroyed wooden doors, windows and roofs of houses. When we returned, there were rotten corpses, bones and weapons of Indian soldiers in the fields. It was a horrible sight. I can never forget it.” 

He added that many families, who had migrated from India in 1947, had already seen the horrors of war and partition and had lost everything. With the India-Pakistan war of 1965, their properties and belongings were destroyed once again. “Nonetheless, these brave and resilient people living in the border area did not give up and rebuilt their homes. Thousands of cattle were also killed in the war,” he said.

The elders of the area said that unlike today when people have their licensed weapons, at that time, everyone had sticks and axes to fight. "If India makes the mistake to attack ever Pakistan again, then the people residing in the border areas will reply sternly," they stressed.

PRODUCED BY: ZEESHAN AHMAD
DESIGN: NIHA DAGIA
PHOTOS: ARCHIVE

The mystery of Pakistan’s flattening Covid-19 curve

The mystery of Pakistan's flattening Covid-19 curve

NCOC officials break down the country's coronavirus containment strategy, offering explanations for its seemingly miraculous recovery

A nation on the same page

Speaking to The Express Tribune, officials from the National Command and Operation Centre (NCOC), the nerve centre of Pakistan’s Covid-19 containment efforts, offered some explanations as to why the country succeeded where others have not.

“Our strategy has been charactised by a ‘whole of the nation’ approach with unprecedented cooperation between the federating units,” one official explained. “Strategy-making has been centralised based on the national leadership’s intent and the maximum power has been delegated to NCOC by the National Coordination Committee,” he said.

“Because of this, we have been able to be flexible, adaptive and responsive in implementation at the operational level,” the official added. “All federating units have participate in this effort wholeheartedly and our consultative process with them has been dispassionate, open, two-way, evidence-based and data-driven.”

“The establishment of NCOC has also made decision-making much more efficient by ensuring any Covid-19 related decision in any department and ministry is taken under a single roof,” another official said. “Decisions once made are uniformly applied; any corrections suggested thereof are referred back to NCOC for consideration and recalibration of approach.”

“Due to its apolitical nature and participative, non-intrusive and all encompassing mode of operation, there is a high degree of trust in NCOC,” the official added. “This is why the Track, Trace and Quarantine (TTQ) and resource management strategies we devised were carried out with all out support from the federating units and the media.”

Between a rock and a hard place

For a country like Pakistan, managing a global pandemic was never going to be an easy task. Where the developed world had the luxury to enact strict lockdowns from the get go, Pakistan due to poverty and lack of infrastructure found itself staring at a tightrope.

“We foresaw that the abruptly emerging Covid-19 crisis would be a protracted challenge for Pakistan,” an NCOC official said. “As the crisis emerged, we followed it up with reflexive national responses, but against the backdrop of widespread poverty and socioeconomic fragility, we realised these initial responses would not be scalable,” he told The Express Tribune.

Pakistan’s approach had to factor in both economic and social costs, the officials said. The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has estimated Covid-19 would wipe out as much 7.2 per cent manhours in the Asia-Pacific region alone, leaving up to 125 million workers without full-time work.

“In Pakistan, we estimated job losses could range from six to 16.5 million, many of which would be permanent,” the official said. “As many as 67 million people could potentially be pushed below poverty, increasing malnutrition and thereby reducing disease resistance.”

Concurrently with the pandemic, Pakistan faced the largest locust threat in 25 years, officials said. These harvest disruptions, coupled with supply chain issues, would have severely affected food stock availability across the country, particularly in less developed areas, they added.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, officials said the NCOC’s Covid-19 strategy was devised along four strands: national awareness, disease prevention and containment, healthcare optimisation and buildup, and managing socioeconomic fallout.

“To increase national awareness of Covid-19, we carried out timely risk communication along with issuing guidelines and standard operating procedures to prevent the virus from spreading,” an official said. “We also undertook measures to reduce panic, manage expectations and prevent fake information from proliferating,” he added.

The second strand, disease containment, was broken down further into a ‘disease management improvement’, enhanced testing, TTQ, smart lockdown, SOP compliance and community mobilisation strategies, officials said. Side by side, the country also took measures to manage international travel and borders, along with high-risk events.

“Our daily testing capacity increased from 472 tests in February to over 60,000 tests, and the number of labs increased from four in the same month to 133,” the official revealed. “As many as 2.36 million tests have been conducted so far, and currently we are maintaining an average of 22,000 tests per day,” he said.

“Our lockdown strategy, meanwhile, has been adaptive and we move from general lockdowns to smart lockdowns and now, micro smart lockdowns, to zero down on the disease in the long term,” the official added. “At present, 62 micro lockdowns, which encompass small streets or a multi-storey building, have been imposed in 18 districts.”

Arguably the biggest challenge in terms of disease containment was managing high-risk events such as the easing of the lockdown, Eidul Fitr and Eidul Azha and Independence Day.

“We issued comprehensive guidelines for effective management of Eidul Azha to all federating after a deliberate consultation process,” the official said. “The NCOC monitored all pre-Eid activities for SOP compliance,” he added.

To optimise healthcare, the government embarked on a hospital ramp up, procuring critical care and protective equipment, improving resource management, and training and motivating healthcare workers, officials said.

“The federal government has so far added 2,690 oxygenated beds to the national health system,” the official said. “Domestic oxygen manufacturing was ramped up and we also took measures to ensure availability of essential medicines, while promoting indigenous developments that could help fight Covid-19,” he added. “The NCOC looked for ways to strengthen the IT base, and launched initiatives such as Telehealth and Yaran-e-Watan.”

On the socioeconomic front, the government took measures such as announcing a stimulus package and ramping up the Ehsaas programme, officials said. The government encouraged a gradual re-opening of the economy, and passed special anti-hoarding and anti-smuggling ordinances to ensure food and economic security.

The payoff

At present, all major indicators suggest a downward trend in Pakistan’s Covid-19 cases, officials said. “The Covid-19 test positivity rate is persistently holding in single digits,” said one official. “The basic reproduction number of the virus – R0 – is also lower than 1, although it has started creeping up again.”

They added that mortalities had also remained low after Eidul Azha, and average of 12 has been recorded over the last 20 days. “The reduced pressure on our healthcare is most evident from the fact that 89 per cent of our ventilators reserved for Covid-19 have been vacant,” the official said. “Due to efficient disease management and a synergised national effort, the number of cases has been declining consistently. Remarkably, Pakistan is highest percentage of recoveries in the region, at 93.8 per cent.”

Even more miraculously, Pakistan is the only country that managed to reverse a projected economic downturn, officials said. “The International Monetary Fund had projected in April this year that Pakistan would record GDP growth of -1.5. Two months later, the revised projection was much better at -0.4,” an official said. “This is all thanks to rational and timely policy decisions.”

That said, officials warned that any gains could prove temporary if the public and administration lower their guard anytime soon and neglect SOPs. “This is especially true in light of upcoming high risk events like Ashura and the opening of educational institutions,” an official said. “We are entering a high-vigilance period and resurgence of the disease cannot be ruled out in the winter.”

According to officials, a final decision on reopening educational institutes will be taken after a review on September 7. “It is possible that we may opt for a staggered opening, with either higher education institutes or schools opening first,” an official said.

Meanwhile, comprehensive SOPs for Muharram are in the process of implementation with the cooperation of religious clerics at province, district and tehsil levels, they added.

“Living with Covid-19 is a real possibility. It is as yet unclear when a vaccine will be available and immunisation is still likely to be challenge when it is,” warned an official. “There is no room for complacency. While we have tackled the disease effectively, the pandemic if far from over. Any celebrations will have to wait,” he said.

Story: Zeeshan Ahmad
Illustrations: Ibrahim Yahya
Photos: AFP, Reuters

Youm-e-Istehal: A year of lockdown in Kashmir

 

Youm-e-Istehsal: A year of lockdown in Kashmir

India rides out a year of disquiet in the occupied valley

12 months ago, on August 5, the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir region was stripped off special autonomy when the Narendra Modi government split it into two federally controlled territories – a move widely condemned by Kashmiris and Pakistan alike.

Since then, the picturesque valley has been flooded by the occupying troops with thousands under arrest with the Indian government imposing harsh restrictions on movement and  levying a communications blackout.

A year later, the Kashmiris remain under a lockdown with internet restrictions while Modi continues to disregard appeals by human rights organisations and international community to end the curbs.

Read The Express Tribune's special coverage on the one-year anniversary of the abrogation of autonomy.

India bit off more than it can chew

Facing lockdown and a near-total communication blackout, the people of IIOJK have been subjected to unparalleled humiliation and human rights violations.

A giant open-air prison

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), more than 1,250 Kashmiris have been blinded by metal pellets used by Indian security forces from mid 2016 to the end of 2018.

India uses sexual violence as a weapon

The Modi’s Hindutva supremacist government continues to use rape and molestation as a ‘weapon of war’ and ‘collective punishment’ in the occupied territory to suppress the legitimate right to freedom of the innocent Kashmiri people.

Families disconnected in IIOJK amid blackout

The world has had very little contact with the occupied state, as troops continue to patrol the area—the cadence of thumping boots the most deafening amid state-wide blackout. However, it is the millions of disenfranchised civilians who have been caught in the crosshairs of this political turmoil and cut off from their families on the other side of the occupancy.

 

Violence continues unabated in IIOJK

India’s illegal action in the occupied part of Jammu and Kashmir that it claimed would bring peace and development to the disputed region has in fact “only brought more violence and uncertainty,” according to an article published in a prestigious American magazine.

‘India has to pay for its crimes in IIOJK’

What IIOJK witnessed on August 5, 2019, was the continuation of the Indian suppression that started in 1947. On that day, Delhi snatched Kashmiri people’s right to self-determination and occupied the whole region by force.

Modi receives flak for occupying Kashmir

An increasing number of independent observers have taken their criticism of the Bharatiya Janata party’s (BJP) decision to proceed with the illegally annexation of the territory to the Social Media.

PRODUCED BY: NIHA DAGIA
ZEESHAN AHMED & HAMMAD SARFARAZ

PHOTOS: REUTERS, INP
ILLUSTRATION: IBRAHIM YAHYA & MOHSIN ALAM