NewsHistoryKashmir attack: Tracing the path that led to Pulwama

Kashmir attack: Tracing the path that led to Pulwama

The suicide attack that killed more than 40 Indian soldiers in February was carried out by a young Kashmiri from Pulwama. Ahead of voting in the region in India's general election, Sameer Yasir reports on the rise in youth militancy over the past two years.

Kashmir attack: The suicide attack that killed more than 40 Indian soldiers in February was carried out by a young Kashmiri from Pulwama. Ahead of voting in the region in India’s general election, Sameer Yasir reports on the rise in youth militancy over the past two years.

Around 15:15 local time (09:45 GMT) on 14 February, Adil Ahmad Dar drove a vehicle packed with explosives into a convoy of 78 buses carrying Indian paramilitary police in Pulwama, on the heavily guarded Srinagar-Jammu highway.

It was a devastating attack – the worst carried out against Indian forces in decades.

It shocked the country, as newspapers and TV screens were filled with stories of soldiers and their shattered families. Some had just returned from a visit home; others had called a family member hours before the attack; a few were speaking to them on the phone when the explosives went off.

Adil Ahmad Dar was identified hours later, when the Pakistan-based militant group, Jaish-e-Mohammad, released a video online saying it had carried out the attack. In the video, Dar appears to show no remorse for what he is going to do. He said he joined the group in 2018 and was eventually “assigned” the task of carrying out the attack in Pulwama.

He said that by the time the video was released he would be in jannat (heaven).

As tensions between nuclear-armed India and Pakistan rose in the aftermath of the attack and Kashmir remained on edge, more details about Dar emerged. His story was disturbingly familiar.

The 14 February attack was the deadliest against Indian security forces in decades
The 14 February attack was the deadliest against Indian security forces in decades

He grew up in Indian-administered Kashmir in Pulwama district where the attack occurred. Pulwama is part of the Anantnag constituency – the only seat in the Indian election that is voting over three different phases for security reasons, the last being on 6 May.

Dar was a high school dropout and had been doing odd jobs as a mason when his parents reported him missing in March last year.

He was 22, and, by all accounts, shy and quiet. His family say his anger against the Indian state grew after he was injured while participating in a protest against the killing of a popular militant in 2016.

Dar was one of thousands of Kashmiris who were born, and later died, in the shadow of the gun.

There has been an armed rebellion against Indian rule in Muslim-majority Kashmir since 1989. India blames Pakistan for fomenting violence in the region by supporting militancy – a charge Pakistan denies. Since 1989, Kashmir has been convulsed by regular episodes of violence that have killed more than 70,000 people, including many Kashmiri Hindus targeted by militants in the early 1990s.

Critics say India’s heavy-handed tactics have alienated local youths. A UN report on violence in the region between June 2016 and April 2018 pointed to excessive force used by Indian security personnel, including the firing of pellet guns that have blinded hundreds. India rejected the report and its findings.

“Kashmiris who were born after the 1990s have never seen peace,” says Abdul Ahad Bhat, 68, a resident of Pulwama. “They were born amid curfews and died before they ended.”

Mr Bhat says the Kashmir he remembers from before 1989 is a “dream” this generation has been denied.

Militancy in the valley had declined by the 2000s but grew again after the killing of young militant leader, Burhan Wani, in 2016. And it has been on the rise since – 2016 saw the deaths of 150 suspected militants and more than 230 died in 2018, according to official figures.

Wani was extremely active on social media. India considered him a terrorist but for many locals he represented a new Kashmiri generation. When he was killed in a gun battle with Indian security forces, protests engulfed the valley.

Dozens were killed and hundreds injured as security forces fired live rounds and tear gas at protesters. Many were also blinded by pellets. Adil Ahmad Dar, who took part in the protests, was shot in the leg and bedridden for 11 months.

“That day changed him,” says his father, Ghulam Hassan Dar, 62. “A shy boy transformed into a volcano of anger but he rarely expressed it.”

He, like other locals, believes many of the boys and men who protested at Wani’s killing joined the insurgency.

Adil Ahmad Dar spent more time praying and reading on the internet while recovering than mingling with his friends. He ran away from home to join the militants in March 2018.

Burhan Wani's killing in 2016 drew sympathy in the Kashmir valley
Burhan Wani’s killing in 2016 drew sympathy in the Kashmir valley

The family found out about his involvement in the attack when his uncle, Abdul Rashid Dar, received a call from police. He says he was horrified to learn that his nephew – under the alias Waqas Commando – was behind the attack.

Some in the family’s village, Gundibagh, react similarly.

One said Dar had hardly talked to anyone after his cousin, Manzoor, a suspected militant, was killed in June 2016.

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