Parvez Ahmad Khan. Photo: Special arrangement
Srinagar: The family of a 26-year-old civilian who was killed on Thursday by the Central Reserve Police Force
(CRPF) in south Kashmir’s Anantnag have demanded an impartial
investigation into the circumstances leading to the controversial
shootout.
Parvez Ahmad Khan, a poor nomad and the major breadwinner in his
family of seven including two minor daughters, pregnant wife, a minor
sister and younger brother besides ageing parents, was killed on
Thursday evening by CRPF personnel.
According to a J&K police spokesperson, Parvez, who belongs to
the nomadic community, was travelling with another person in a
plateless, Mahindra Scorpio car which was asked to stop at a CRPF
checkpoint in Anantnag’s Rooh-Monghal village at around 9:45 pm.
“However, it [the car] rushed towards the checkpoint. It was then
challenged by the on-duty troops. Troops fired upon [the car] in self
defence, in which one person died. But the driver of the vehicle managed
to escape from the spot,” the spokesperson added.
Reports said a suspect
identified as Yasir Ali, whose other antecedents were not immediately
known, has been detained by police. Senior superintendent of police
(Anantnag), Ashish Mishra, didn’t respond to several text messages.
Inspector general of CRPF (Kashmir) Charu Sinha could not be reached
for comments. Junaid Khan, a spokesperson of the paramilitary forces,
said they have “nothing more to add” to what the police have disclosed
in their statement.
Discreet burial
Zakir Ahmad, the victim’s brother-in-law, told The Wire that
Parvez spoke with his wife, Muneeba, who is eight months pregnant, at
around 7 pm on Thursday, asking her to cook only rice.
“He was working in a paddy field in the day. He told her that he was
going to get beef and would return home in time so she can cook it for
dinner. However, when he didn’t return till late in the evening, they
all went to sleep,” he said.
Parvez Ahmad Khan. Photo: Special arrangement
Zakir said a police party arrived at their tented accommodation in
Kihribal village of Anantnag around midnight, and asked Muneeba and her
father-in-law to accompany them to the police station as “Parvez had met
with a road accident”.
“Police took their thumb impressions on some papers and kept us
waiting. It was around 4 in the morning when a cop told us that he had
been killed by the CRPF for jumping a checkpoint,” Zakir added.
The homeless family, which moves to Jammu region for six months when
Kashmir is under the grip of winter chills, then requested the police to
hand over the body for performing his last rites. “They didn’t allow us
to even come close to the body. Police even confiscated the phones of
those who tried to click photos of the body,” he said.
At the crack of dawn, a police party took Parvez’s body to Rajkang
top, a nearby mountain, where he was buried discreetly without his
family’s consent. “We were not allowed to perform his last rites or
attend the funeral prayers. We couldn’t even get the last glimpse of his
face. We want justice,” Zakir said.
‘Village sealed’
Zahid Parwaz Choudhary, president of the J&K Gujjar Bakarwal
Youth Conference, a nodal body which propagates the causes of the
marginalised nomadic community, said when the family came to know the
circumstances of Parvez’s death, they tried to inform the elders of the
community.
“However, police didn’t permit them and instead buried the body in
haste in order to cover up the murder of an innocent person. It is a
staged killing,” Zahid said, adding that the police is refusing to allow
the elders of the community from meeting the family.
“The victim’s family and relatives have also been asked not to
venture out of the area. They (police) want to cover up the matter,” he
said.
Two photos taken moments after the killing were shared with The Wire
by the family. One photo shows the fully dressed killed man lying
sideways on the passenger seat with a pool of blood collected in the
centre console of the car. One side of Parvez’s face is untouched by
blood and, although he appears dead, there is no sign of a gunshot
wound.
Another photo purportedly taken after the first picture shows the
motionless body of Parvez, who is now seen only in his undergarments,
lying on the road with multiple gunshot wounds and with his entire face
is smeared with blood.
“If the CRPF men were
suspicious, they could have easily fired in the air or at the tyres of
the car. Instead they not only killed an innocent person but have also
mutilated his body,” Showkat Chaudhary, a prominent Gujjar activist,
said.
He added, “They (security personnel) take relatives and microphones
to the encounter sites and try to convince the militants to surrender.
Why couldn’t they adopt the same method and discreetness in Parvez’s
case?”
A video which has gone viral on social media shows an inconsolable
Muneeba, Parvez’s wife, crying in desperation in an open ground near
their tented accommodation, unable to come to terms with the sudden loss
of husband, “What will happen to us now? I have small kids. Who will
take care of them? Who will take care of us?”
‘Knee-jerk reaction’
Several Valley-based political leaders, religious heads and elders of
the Gujjar community are demanding justice for the victim. The killing
took place on the day when two teachers from the minority community were
brutally shot dead in Srinagar.
Barely 36 hours earlier, a prominent Kashmiri Pandit chemist and a
non-local street vendor from Bihar were shot dead in Srinagar while the
president of a local association of drivers was killed in Bandipora on
the same day, putting security forces on a high degree of alert.
“A heightened state of alert cannot be a reason to open fire like
this. Senior officers of the security forces need to ensure calmer heads
prevail & nothing happens to worsen the situation,” former J&K
chief minister Omar Abdullah tweeted.
Another former chief minister, Mehbooba Mufti, tweeted: “This appears
to be the start of a knee jerk reaction to what has transpired during
last two days. Disproportionate force has been used by CRPF which has
resulted in this innocent civilian’s death. Will there be any action
against the trigger happy personnel?”
In
another tweet, the PDP chief said she has been put under house arrest
and prevented by police from meeting the family of the victim.
In a statement, CPI(M) general secretary M.Y. Tarigami said the
circumstances under which Parvez was killed should be probed thoroughly.
“Losing precious lives is unfortunate and mere condemnation of such
incidents isn’t enough,” he said, asking the administration to
compensate the family.
SOURCE ; THE WIRE
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