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Fetishisation' of Kashmiri women
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Pop culture trend in Pervert Hindutwa India.

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India's 'patriotism pop' songs urge Hindus to claim Kashmir
Songs about buying land in Kashmir and marrying Kashmiri women garner millions of views in India after status revoked.

3 hours ago
The music videos began appearing on social media within hours of the announcement by India's Hindu-led nationalist government that it was stripping statehood from the disputed region of Kashmir that had been in place for decades.


The songs delivered a message to India's 250 million YouTube users about moving to the Muslim-majority region, buying land there and marrying Kashmiri women.

It is the latest example of a growing genre in India known as "patriotism pop" - songs flooding social mediaabout nationalism and the country's burgeoning right-wing ideology.

Earlier songs were limited to the rise of Hindus in India, defeating regional rival Pakistan and hoisting the Indian flag in every household. Now, they include settling in Kashmir - a rugged and beautiful Himalayan region claimed by Pakistan and India, although both countries control only a portion of it.


On August 5, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi revoked Kashmir's decades-old special status that was guaranteed under Article 370 of India's constitution and sent thousands of troops to the region. The move has provoked anger in the Indian-administered region, which has been under a security lockdown that has seen thousands arrested to prevent protests.

One of Modi's revisions allows anyone to buy land in the territory, which some Kashmiris fear could mean an influx of Hindus who would change the region's culture and demographics. Critics have likened it to Israeli settlements, illegal under international law, in Palestinian territories.

The patriotic songs are mostly shared on platforms like Facebook, Twitterand the fast-growing app TikTok, which in June had about 120 million active users in India. Despite their low production values, poorly-matched lip-synching and repetitive techno beat, many of these soundtracks have gotten millions of hits on YouTube.

The songs are a hit among youthful followers in northern and eastern parts of India, and their creators do not seem to be stopping anytime soon.

A service for the nation?
Nitesh Singh Nirmal identifies himself as a producer, songwriter and composer for his Rang Music studios in the eastern state of Bihar. A Modi admirer, Nirmal claims to be the first to produce a soundtrack on the revocation of Kashmir's statehood, completing it in three hours.

The song, Dhara 370, or Article 370, starts with visuals of an Indian flag fluttering atop New Delhi's famous Red Fort, followed by old footage of Modi from a previous Independence Day ceremony.

The singer thanks Modi and his government for keeping his promise to remove Article 370 from the constitution. The video then cuts to the map of Kashmir, along with words that roughly translate to how Pakistan has lost to India.

The song has gotten more than 1.6 million hits on YouTube since it was posted by Nirmal, who has no musical background. He said he only found his calling when Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) resoundingly won the 2014 election.

That was when Nirmal thought he could write songs about nationalism.

"I am doing service for the nation. People dance to these songs," he says.

Nirmal's claims about their popularity are not far-fetched. TikTok, which lets the user lip-synch to music and make short vines, is flooded with images of Hindu nationalists declaring plans to go to Kashmir and marry women there. Most of the videos have music similar to the kind produced by Nirmal.

In April, TikTok was removed from Android and iPhone app stores after an Indian court ruled it was "encouraging pornography".

The rising appeal for songs that promote nationalism and talk about reclaiming Kashmir have paved the way for lesser-known artists to join in.

'Fetishisation' of Kashmiri women
Salman Siddiqui, who is in his twenties and studies science in the state of Uttar Pradesh, wanted to showcase his musical writing prowess and contacted Nirmal. They collaborated on a song about a man who is seeking a Kashmiri bride and wants to be the first to have a wedding procession that travels from India to the region.

Nirmal and Siddiqui insist the songs are not sexist.

"It's the desire of a young man's heart to marry a Kashmiri woman," Siddiqui says.


The idea was boosted August 6 by lawmaker Vikram Saini, who told members of his BJP "eager to get married" to go to Kashmir, adding that his party has "no problem with it".

Critics say the idea of marrying Kashmiri women to "reclaim" the region is rooted in a patriarchy that objectifies and dehumanises Kashmiris.

Political anthropologist Ather Zia calls this a "fetishisation in the Indian imagination".

Such songs are a "culmination of a toxic misogynistic nationalist thinking that draws validation from humiliating Kashmiri women," Zia said.

"The Indian media - from news to entertainment - has left no stone unturned in portraying Kashmiri women in the racist trope of 'coveted fair-skinned ones' [and] at the same time being helpless and needing saving from their own men - all this while demonizing Kashmiri men," she said.

While some artists oppose writing such songs, they say the audience demand is strong.

Strong demand
Singer Nardev Bainiwal, who lives in Haryana state and owns the Jawan Music Co, has a song on Kashmir that got 1.9 million hits on YouTube.

"We write songs about things people want," Bainiwal says, noting his main audience is from smaller cities and towns in northern India where internet penetration has picked up in recent years.

Google Trends has shown an increase in Indians using search terms like "marry Kashmiri girl" and "buy land in Kashmir".

"I am personally against such declarations, but if we don't make these songs, someone else will and we will lose out on money," Bainiwal says.


Nirmal says that since he published his song on August 5, he has earned nearly $100 for work that cost him about $20 to produce.

He says the key is to keep abreast of the news and gauge the public mood. He has songs ready if India's Supreme Court allows a Hindu temple to be built on a site where hard-liners in 1992 attacked and demolished a 16th-century mosque, sparking deadly Hindu-Muslim violence.

"Songs about building [the] of the temple could be my next hit," he says.

Apart from the online revenue, the artists also perform concerts. Nirmal has had 10 shows in the last two weeks.


"The business," Nirmal says, "is booming."
 
Genocide Watch, a global organisation dedicated to the prevention of genocide, has issued two warning alerts for India — one for the occupied territory of Kashmir and the other for Assam state.

According to the website, a 'Genocide Watch' warning is declared by the NGO when there are signs of the early stages of a genocide in progress.

Founded by academic Dr Gregory Stanton in 1999, the organisation exists to predict, prevent, stop, and punish genocide — as defined in the Genocide Convention — and other forms of mass murder.

The most recent genocide alert issued by the organisation was for occupied Kashmir, in which it identified the genocidal process, based on Dr Stanton's 10 Stages of Genocide, to be far advanced:

  1. Classification: Hindu and Sikh Indian army “us” vs Kashmiri Muslim civilian “them”
  2. Symbolisation: Muslims have Muslim names (on ID cards), Kashmiri language, dress, mosques
  3. Discrimination: Hindu pandits were economically dominant until 1990; BJP reasserted Hindu power
  4. Dehumanisation: Muslims are called “terrorists”, “separatists”, “criminals”, “insurgents”
  5. Organisation: 600,000 heavily armed Indian army troops and police dominate occupied Kashmir
  6. Polarisation: Modi and the BJP incite anti-Muslim hatred; social media spread falsehoods
  7. Preparation: The Indian army occupies Kashmir; BJP leaders speak of the “Final Solution” for Kashmir
  8. Persecution: Kashmiri Muslims are locked down, subject to arrest, torture, rape, and murder
  9. Extermination: Since 1990, there have been at least 25 massacres by Indian troops as well as Muslim fighters with death tolls over 25
  10. Denial: Modi and BJP say their goals are to “bring prosperity” and “end terrorism”; they deny any massacres. No Indian Army troops or police are ever tried for torture, rape or murder
In view of these developments, Genocide Watch has called upon the United Nations and its members to warn India not to commit genocide in occupied Kashmir.

In pictures: What's happening in occupied Kashmir?

At least 4,000 people, mostly young men, have been detained in Indian-occupied Kashmir since a security lockdown and communications blackout was imposed to curb unrest after New Delhi stripped the disputed region of statehood.

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Kashmiri men sit on a footpath outside a police station waiting to hear about their relatives who were detained during night raids in Srinagar, on August 20. ─ AP


The crackdown began just before Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalist-led government on August 5 stripped Jammu and Kashmir of its semi-autonomy and its statehood, creating two federal territories.

Thousands of additional Indian troops were sent to man checkpoints in the Kashmir Valley, already one of the world’s most militarised regions. Telephone communications, cellphone coverage, broadband internet and cable TV services were cut for the valley’s seven million people.

A report by a team of activists and scholars found that people living under the lockdown expressed “enormous anger and anguish” in response to the surprise move by Modi’s government to revoke autonomy.

Maimoona Mollah, an activist on the fact-finding team, likened the situation in the region to Israel’s security protocol in the Palestinian territories. “Kashmir is like an open jail,” said Vimal Bhai, another activist on the team.
https://www.dawn.com/news/1501025/g...s-for-occupied-kashmir-and-indias-assam-state
 
Soura neighborhood in the outskirts of Srinagar has sealed itself off from security forces. Here is an article published in Arab News about the plight of the people trying to save their neighborhood from atrocities of an Occupation force that has surrounded them from all sides:


'We won’t give an inch': India faces defiance in ‘Kashmir’s Gaza’
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In this file photo, Kashmiri Muslims shout pro-freedom slogans during a protest in Srinagar on Aug. 9, 2019. (AFP)

  • Soura neighborhood in the outskirts of Srinagar has sealed itself off from security forces.
  • Kashmir has waged a three-decade long armed rebellion against Indian rule with tens of thousands of lives, mostly civilians, lost in the conflict.
Updated 22 August 2019
AFP
August 22, 2019 13:45

Srinagar, India, Aug 22, 2019: Young men sit beside a pile of rocks and a bonfire, protecting the only entrance to a besieged neighborhood they call “Kashmir’s Gaza” as a mosque loudspeaker broadcasts slogans of liberation.

In an act of defiance against New Delhi’s controversial decision to strip the Muslim-majority region of its autonomy, Soura neighborhood on the outskirts of Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar has sealed itself off from security forces.
Since early August, residents have erected ramshackle barricades of tin sheets, wooden logs, oil tanks, and concrete pillars, and dug trenches to keep soldiers at bay amid daily protests against India.

“They can only enter Soura over our bodies. We won’t give even an inch of land to India,” Mufeed, a resident who volunteers to guard the neighborhood at night, told AFP.

“Just like Gaza is resisting Israel, we will fight for our motherland with all our might,” Mufeed added.

Kashmir has waged a three-decade-long armed rebellion against Indian rule with tens of thousands of lives, mostly civilians, lost in the conflict.

Ahead of the announcement, India rushed tens of thousands of extra troops to the restive region to join 500,000 already in the valley and imposed a strict clampdown fearing further unrest.
But protests have broken out, with the lower-middle-class Soura leading the way. At least 15,000 people rallied on August 9 — the biggest demonstration in Kashmir so far.

They were met by security forces firing live ammunition, tear gas and pellet guns to disperse the crowds, with more than two dozen people reportedly injured.
Soura, a crammed lakeside community of more than 2,000 homes, is surrounded by security forces on three sides.

The renowned mosque Jenab Saeb has become an assembly point for thousands of protesters in the neighborhood.
Every night, residents march through its narrow lanes, carrying torches and passing graffiti with the words “Freedom for Kashmir” and “Go India, go back.”
Locals pass along messages if they spot any police movement on the main highway just beyond Soura.

Police forces, who have deployed drones and helicopters, tried to enter Soura at least three times but were pushed back by stone-throwing youth, some also armed with axes and harpoons.

Familiar with police’s crowd-dispersing tactics, protesters use salt water to wash their faces after chilli and tear gas are fired, and wear helmets and glasses to protect themselves against pellets.

Three youths have so far been arrested after venturing out from the area.
“They (India) are testing our resilience and they will definitely fail,” local Nahida told AFP.

“We defeated them last time and even if this situation continues for years, we won’t give in.”

Despite the Soura protests, authorities stress that Kashmir has remained largely peaceful since the lockdown.

Soura has long been part of restive Kashmir’s history since the region was divided between India and Pakistan after independence from the British in 1947.

It was the birthplace of Kashmir’s former prime minister Sheikh Abdullah, who agreed to join India as a state with autonomy rights.

His National Conference party — which has fought for more autonomy while being under Indian rule — ran the state for more than three decades, with his son Farooq Abdullah and grandson Omar Abdullah becoming chief ministers.

Farooq and Omar Abdullah were detained by New Delhi as part of the lockdown.
Residents have become more anti-India in recent years. In 2016 when mass street protests broke out over the death of a popular militant commander, Soura was the scene of dozens of clashes with government forces.

Soura resident Rafiq Mansoor Shah said many locals shared his misgivings about Abdullah’s decision to accede to India.
Under the new arrangements announced this month, Indians from other parts of the vast nation can now apply for government jobs and buy property in Kashmir. But many Soura natives like Shah believe New Delhi has “nefarious plans to grab our land.”

“Because of (the Abdullah family’s) greed for power... we have become slaves of India. We are trying to correct the historical mistake,” he told AFP.

“We are trying to lead and inspire the rest of Kashmir.”
 
The truth is begining to come out. Indian occupation and its dark, inhumane and murderous clampdown on Kashmiris is becoming more and more exposed. Thousands have been abducted, scores are missing and with no access to remote villages, thousands more are believed to be in peril and face the threat of genocide at the hands of Butcher of Gujrat Modi Hitler and his Nazi Style Indian Occupation Army:

New york Times Vdeo


5:44
What’s Happening in Kashmir? Our Cameras Contradict India’s Official Story
LATEST VIDEO DISPATCHES
Indian authorities say life is returning to normal in Kashmir. But thousands of people have been detained, and the military still patrols the streets, firing pellet guns and tear gas to quell protests.
 

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