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      |  A
 small village that gave Kashmir’s counterinsurgency an alternative name
 wants to change its name now - hoping they would not be identified as 
Nawabadis. Ibrahim Wani and Farooq Ahmad report on the Nawabadi Mohalla and its haunting baggage. 
 Nawabadi
 Mohalla may pass off as just another small village in the Sonwari belt 
of north Kashmir, but for its street lights that make it stand apart. 
Those familiar with the village, don’t dare to take it for any other 
village, anyways.
 
 Nawabadi has entered Kashmir’s lexicon as a 
word that strikes terror. There were many villages in Kashmir that 
became hotbeds of counterinsurgency in mid 1990’s but Nawabadi was one 
name that stuck.
 
 A village of some three hundred people, two and
 a half kilometres from Safapora, Nawabadi residents now want to change 
its name to Mirabad. They no longer want to identify with its past.
 
 A
 few kilomteres from father of counterinsurgency Kuka Parrey’s Hajin 
village, Nawabadi Mohalla gave Ikhwan some of its most dreaded men. Many
 remember the village as the birthplace of ruthless renegades, like 
Fayaz Mir alias Fayaz Nawabadi, notorious for extortion, rape, 
politically motivated killings. For the state security apparatus, that 
patronised them, these men were important to break the back of militancy
 in the Sonawari-Ganderbal belt and by extension whole of Kashmir. So 
they did. Hardly anyone was spared.
 
 Perhaps because many of the 
first renegades came from Nawabadi village, the name in local parlance 
became a synonym for all the counterinsurgents or police informers. An 
alternative name for Ikhwan, the largest renegade group.
 
 Nawbid 
was actually used in the area to refer to the residents of the Nawabadi 
Mohalla. So anyone from the area was a Nawbud. After the switching of 
Ikhwan to counter insurgency, apart from the ruthless renegades who 
emerged from Nawabadi Mohalla, the village provided a haven for all 
counter-insurgents. Even though only a few from the village carried out 
the dirty work, almost all residents were Ikhwan sympathisers.
 
 Nawabdis
 trace their shift of allegiance to the killing of a JKLF militant from 
the village by Hizbul Mujahideen in inter faction rivalry in 1993.
 
 Manzoor
 Ahmad was the first postgraduate from the village. He did his MA in 
Urdu from Kashmir University. Later he joined Jammu Kashmir Students 
Liberation Front and crossed the LoC for arms training. After this he 
joined Jammu Kashmir Liberation Front as Deputy District Commander. This
 was around the time when animosities between Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) and
 JKLF were building up.
 
 While on his way back from Sopore 
Manzoor was picked up by Hizbul Mujahideen. “They accused him of being 
an Indian agent,” say the residents, “but at that time it was widely 
known that Manzoor was a man of character. It was actually that Ahsan 
Dar wanted him to join HM.”
 
 When news of Manzoor’s abduction 
spread in the area, desperate attempts started to secure his release. 
“The negotiations were carried out at the highest level; almost all the 
known militants and separatist leaders were involved.
 
 The 
residents were promised his release. “But he was not released. We kept 
on searching for him. We formed search parties and would search for him 
throughout the area,” says Kawaam Din. But the search yielded no result.
 At this time Fayaz, Manzoor’s cousin was in jail.
 
 “Even Syed 
Ali Shah Geelani searched for him in his car. He told us that he had 
spent 13000 rupees searching for him,” he says, “Moulvi Abbas Ansari and
 Saleem Geelani also mediated but to no avail.”
 
 Demands for 
Manzoor’s release were building up. People were protesting. The Hajin 
bazaar remained shut down for 25 days at a stretch.
 
 Then, 
residents say, a HM rebel Shams-u-Din informed the villagers that 
Manzoor had been killed on the second day of his abduction, and lay 
buried in Hari-Taar, on the banks of Jehlum near Sopore.
 
 
  “We
 rushed to the spot. Some militants from HM were guarding the spot, and 
they fired on the crowd. People from the surrounding areas like 
Shah-Gund joined in and we retrieved the body,” adds Kawaam. The 
eruption of emotions and sentiments was spontaneous. 
 “It was an 
angry crowd, which sees nothing in rage. On the way from Hari-Taar to 
Nawabadi Mohalla, around 14 houses belonging to Jamat-e-Islami (JeI) 
members or sympathisers were burned,” adds Kamaal. “It was a day which 
this region can not forget. It was a day of pain.”
 
 After this the
 rift between JKLF and HM-JeI deepened. A civil war sort of situation 
ensued where people from both sides were being assassinated. The 
Nawabadis became fiercely anti-HM and anti-Jamaat. “In all this all the 
militant organisations united against HM, and opened a united front 
against them,” he says.
 
 Peer Ziya-ud-Din of Asham, a JKLF 
sympathiser and father of Nazir Ahmad Geelani of JKLF was also gunned 
down by HM. This added oil to the fire. Around 500-600 people would die 
in this infighting, many among them were civilians.
 
 It was around
 this time that 28 militants surrendered, and under the leadership of 
Kuka Parray formed the renegade Ikhwan. Fayaz, now released, joined the 
Ikwan, and with the wounds of Manzoor’s loss still fresh, many Nawabadis
 followed him into the fold. “When we had seen the body of Manzoor, we 
could see nothing else. He had come out for the cause. We had followed 
in his footsteps, but Jamaat and Hizbul mujahideen ruined it. They 
targeted everyone who was not their supporter. We could tolerate it no 
further,” says an ex-counter insurgent.
 
 Fayaz was merciless. He
 soon gained notoriety and was gifted the post of commander-in-chief of 
the Ikhwan. Kuka Parray reigned as the supremo. Thus started the reign 
of terror. After that it was “catch and kill,” accepts Kawaam.
 
 Though
 the actual gun wielding Nawabdis did not number more than 10, all the 
counter insurgents in Valley - estimated to be between 1,000-1,200- came
 to be known by the name.
 
 The shifting allegiances of Nawabadis 
created animosities with adjoining villages. Residents recall that after
 Manzoor’s death the adjoining villages in Safapora and Bandipora 
enforced a boycott of the village.
 
 “The shopkeepers won’t provide us amenities. We were not given medicines even for around six months,” says a Nawabadi resident.
 
 Mohammad
 Sidiq, father of Fayaz Nawabadi says the boycott forced them to loot 
any trucks that passed the village. “But we would pay them,” he said in 
the same breath.
 
 In coming years, the response from the Nawabadis was often brutal. Fayaz Nawabadi walked the streets like a king.
 
 “Even policemen had to look down while walking past him,” says a resident of Ganderbal.
 
 He
 was the most notorious export of Nawabadi Mohallah to the rest of 
Kashmir. The Commander-in-Chief of Kuka Parray’s Ikhwan, he is said to 
have killed hundreds of people. “If his eyes fell on something he liked,
 it had to be his,” the resident adds. One day his eyes fell on a new 
scooter parked in the Safapora market. The scooter belonged to Waseem, a
 21 year old.
 
 “Waseem would not just let go of his new scooter 
when the Nawabadis asked him to give it to them,” says the resident. 
Fayaz then walked up to him, and held him by his throat. He then pumped 
bullets into him. Waseem fell to ground. When a shopkeeper raised his 
voice, he too met the same fate. One more onlooker also fell to the 
ground. “Three innocent people died that day,” adds the resident. With 
three dead bodies on the streets Fayaz issued his threat, “People of 
Safapora, whosever goes against us will meet a similar fate,” he says.
 
 
  Fayaz
 would be accompanied by his trusted lieutenants, Abdul Hamid Mir alias 
Nikka Bhai, Mohammad Afzal Mir alias Commander Adil, Ghulam Nabi Mir 
alias Kaka among others, all Nawabadis. They reign of terror engulfed 
Sonawari, Safapora, Ganderbal areas. Hardly anyone was spared, but the 
families of militants and Jamat-e-Islami supporters were especially 
targeted. It started a wave of migration from the area to the urban 
areas. Many people even left the state. “No one was safe,” says the 
resident. The killings continued. 
 Saif-u-Din Bhat, a 60-years-old
 teacher from Safapora was killed because his brother was associated 
with HM. Another teacher Abdul Karim Bhat was killed because of links 
with Jamat-e-Islami. A bank employee, Mohammad Afzal of Yongoora Chak 
also fell to bullets, for unknown reasons. The number is estimated to be
 above 300. Some locals say the number of the people killed was much 
higher than 300. “Many deaths were never reported. Many of these will 
never be known,” the resident adds.
 
 Nawabadis once went to the 
house of a Jamaat-e-Islami sympathiser in Banyari village. The man was 
not there. “The routine would have been to harass the family and leave,”
 says Yasir, a resident of the area.  But on this day death was in the 
air. “One of the Nawabadi commanders caught hold of a six month old son 
of the man,” he says. Then hell broke loose. “He flung the child into 
the air, and the Nawabadi party started firing.” The infant came down in
 smithereens. “I can not forget that day,” says Yasir, “there are no 
words to express this cruelty.”
 
 Tales of the atrocities abound. 
“One more case still resonates in the minds and hearts of people. It 
always gives me pain,” says Yasir as he recalls. “There was a girl in 
Asham, a beautiful girl, Nazima, the daughter of one Ghulam Mohammad 
Lone. And then their eyes fell on her,” he says.
 
 Nazima was 
kidnapped and raped. “For days together no one knew of her,” he recalls.
 Then details related to her emerged. It was Fayaz actually who had 
sought her. When she had resisted she was raped, by many Nawabadis, says
 Yasir. They raped her for days. She became pregnant. After a few months
 she was let go.
 
 In the meantime, Ashraf Nawabidi, Fayaz’s brother started pursuing Nazima’s sister. She too was kidnapped.
 
 “The
 family would not have protested if they would have known what was to 
come next,” says Yasir. The Nawabadis converged on the Asham market. 
Nazima was dragged out on the street. Fayaz oversaw everything. “What 
transpired next is engraved in the psyche of the people there forever,” 
says Yasir.
 
 The eight month pregnant woman was held forcibly. 
Then her clothes were torn. After this she was paraded naked. “Fayaz 
pulled the trigger, and shot her in the abdomen first. He kept on 
shooting and shouting - see the result,” recalls Yasir. Nazima died on 
the spot. Her sister is still with Ashraf.
 
 Even after an incident
 of this sort, no one raised a voice. That was the peak of Nawabadi 
terror. “But nothing is permanent. Whatever goes up, has to come down,” 
says Yasir. Most of the Nawabadis met cruel deaths. Kaka was shot dead 
in 1994, Nikka Bhai was killed in 1995, Afzal in 1996. The kingpin, 
Fayaz after surviving 18 attempts on life finally met his fate on Feb 
17, 2000. He was blown up in an IED blast in Sumbal, just a few 
kilometres away from where he had shot Nazima. According to locals the 
intensity of the blast was such that his body parts could be seen 
hanging from the power supply wires. Many people believe that he was 
killed by his own people - the Ikhwanis.
 
 
  Fayaz
 Nawabadi is considered a martyr and a hero in his village. So are the 
other Nawabadis killed in these years. Their graveyard reads 
Mazar-e-Shohada. Fayaz’s grave is decorated and fenced. It lies on way 
to the shrine of a saint in the mohalla, called Sayeed Sahib. A stone 
throw’s distance from the graveyard is a model school. His house has a 
12 foot high wall topped by barbed wire. He is survived by two wives and
 four children. 
 “Similar is the case for many others too,” says 
Afzal, a government employee who was assigned a task in the area. For 
him too the visit was painful. His best friend had been killed by Fayaz.
 “I tried to skip the area, but I had to do my job,” he says.
 
 While
 walking through the village he saw a man walking behind him. Initially 
he became suspicious. Then when he finally gathered the courage to ask 
the person as to why he was following him, he came to know that he had 
no job or work to do. The reply startled him. The man had identified 
himself as an ex-counter insurgent, some of the few who had survived. He
 did not venture out of the village, out the fear.
 
 “Even though 
almost all the notorious Nawabadis were killed, the people of the 
surrounding areas can not forget the mayhem inflicted by them,” says 
Afzal, who happened to meet a relative of Waseem on return from the 
mohalla. Their response was, “There is no question of forgiveness. Even 
if they repent it, nothing is going to change. There can be no 
forgiveness.”
 
 Ejaz from Safapora echoes similar sentiments. “We 
cannot forget what Nawabadis have done to us. They are traitors. There 
is no question of having any sort of relation with them. They are still 
like that only,” he says.
 
 However, the residents of the Nawabdi Mohallah insist they want to stay aloof of politics.
 
 “We
 want to be away from politics,” says Mohammad Kamaal Mir, a resident of
 Nawabadi Mohalla, “We have already suffered a lot. Now we want to be 
away from all this. We also have same aspirations like all other 
Kashmiris, and our children like others too also cheer for the Pakistani
 cricket team. But we are silent spectators. We will not repeat our 
mistakes again now.”
 
 The residents of the area are self confessed
 supporters of National Conference. “It is we who made Akbar Lone 
successful in Sumbal,” says Kawaam Din. He further adds, “Akbar Lone is 
the most honest politician in all of Kashmir, and he is an ideal for all
 the politicians.” They credit him for most of the development work in 
the village, including the street lights and the tube wells.
 
 “We
 were even approached by the opposition parties with an offer of 40,000 
rupees to vote for them, which we out rightly rejected,” say Kawaam. 
According to him recently when they had gone to meet Akbar Lone, he gave
 their issues precedence over all the other works on hand. “He even sent
 prayers on Fayaz and recalled how he had saved him when once Kuka 
Parray had grabbed his collar to beat him.”
 
 “It is us who voted 
against Kuka Parray. We made him fall. He did no development work here,”
 says Sidiq Mir, father of Fayaz. He describes Kuka Parray as a fool who
 was made the king. “If he would have been in Srinagar he would have 
been taken to a mental hospital,” he remarks.
 
 
  Narrating
 an incident when he had rebuked Kuka Parray for letting his brother go 
on a looting spree all over the area, Sidiq says, “I told him that his 
brother was like a wild bull that was going wild throughout the area and
 causing damage and action should be taken against him.” Later Kuka 
Parray according to him called him privately and told him that he should
 not have said this in front of everyone. 
 When Fayaz’s father, an
 employee of the cattle farm operated by SKAUST in the vicinity was 
about to retire, he was put under suspension. So his pension was 
automatically stopped. He attributes the development to Kuka Parray. At 
this time, Fayaz was among his main men. The issue was finally resolved 
when some politicians close to both the sides intervened.
 
 Mehraj,
 a resident of Ganderbal was a child when the Nawabadis were at the peak
 of their power. He remembers a day when Nawabadis converged on his 
village, and cut down all the willow and poplar trees on the government 
land. “They sold it to their own friends at the cheapest possible 
rates,” he says adding that the fear was such that no government 
official either resisted or complained of the incident. Such was the 
case with all of the area. “They even cut trees in the Jarokha Bagh,” 
says Yasin another resident of the area, “Loot was a common thing with 
Nawabadis those days.”
 
 Yasir says, “Any vehicle which plied from 
the area was looted. People would think twice before passing through the
 area dominated by renegades.” Sidiq accepts. “The people from the 
surrounding areas on the directives of militants had imposed a blockade 
on us. So we had no option left but to loot for survival.” But according
 to Gulzar from Sumbal, “Nawabadis have always had a bad image in the 
area. They were involved in thefts and robberies before they became 
associated with counter-insurgency. After that they would carry out 
their activities openly. Extortion became their main business.”
 
 With
 Fayaz’s death, Nawabadi mohalla’s power waned. The village elders 
approached other surrounding areas, with a message of reconciliation. 
But they have met little success. The scars ran deep.
 
 When the 
Northern Command chief visited the area, post counter-insurgency, 
Nawabadis too were invited. “I stood up and asked them that what had the
 Government of India done for us,” says Kawaam. “I asked them what had 
they paid the families of the soldiers who had been martyred in Kargil, 
and in relation to them we were paid nothing. I told them that India has
 not paid us a penny.”
 
 Despite fighting a bloody war for the 
state, Nawbadis say they were neglected. Many of them, say, all they got
 from their haunting past were dead bodies.
 “If I had been in some 
position then, and could think the way I do today, I would not have let 
these things to happen,” says Kamaal.
 
 
  However, Kamaal maintains they do not face any social ostracism today, and are well heard in corridors of power. 
 “We
 have good relations with people of other village, even among from 
people of Jamaat. We are invited in their functions,” says Kamaal.
 
 But still the villagers want to get rid of the baggage their village name carries.
 
 They
 expect Mirabad to conceal their identity, and bring them back into the 
fold of the society. Travelling around with a identity card bearing the 
name of the village may not be wise option always, they admit.
 
 “Nawabadi
 has now become associated with us. It is a sort of stigma. Wherever we 
go, people see us in a particular image. With the name change we hope 
things may get better,” say the Nawabadis.
 
 The story of Nawabadi 
Mohalla is the story of a village which switched sides en-masse. It 
tasted power, and wealth, until the downfall started. Now it is trying 
hard to merge back with the society it stood against. But neither the 
society, nor the village seems to have made its mind fully.
 More details (http://www.kashmirlife.net)
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