Indian filmmaker documents tortures in Kashmir

Posted by Admin On Sunday, 22 January 2012 0 comments



By: DANISH ZARGAR


If this could be some indication of the possible change in the Indian civil society vis-à-vis Kashmir issue, an Indian film maker, has video-graphed the brutal tortures meted out to the Kashmiris by the forces during the armed struggle.

Ashvin Kumar, an independent filmmaker who previously produced ‘Inshallah, football’ and ‘little terrorist’, has come up with ‘Inshallah Kashmir: Living terror’, documenting the disheartening stories of the Kashmiris, mostly ex-militants, who were brutally tortured by the forces. The film will be screened online on the republic day of India, January 26.

The trailer of the film, produced from the footage taken during the shooting of ‘Inshallah Football’ back in 2009, has been already posted on the video-sharing site, ‘you tube’.

“..Most Indians like myself have been kept at a distance from the trauma of our fellow citizens in the Valley of Kashmir. In the autumn of 2009 I travelled across Kashmir valley gathering evidence and research material for the feature film I intended to make (Inshallah Football). I realised this was the opportunity that only a few have had to meet the people of Kashmir and record their stories first hand,” the filmmaker explains in the trailer.

Kumar, the Oscar-nominated filmmaker, produced and directed several films and documentaries like Dazed in Doon (2010); The Forest (2008); and Road to Ladakh (2003).

His recent films were, however, denied the official consent for screening in public. Kumar, for instance, was forbidden to screen, exhibit or distribute his film "Dazed In Doon", based on life in Doon School, by the Dehradun court. Later, his other film ‘Inshallah, Football’, based on the life of Kashmiris, was first banned in India by the CBFC, and then given an 'A' certificate.

The trailer preview of the film, which the censor board may also receive negatively, shows the ex-militants revealing how they were beaten ruthlessly; how their private parts were burnt and given electric shocks; how their skin was scratched using red-hot-shears; and how they saw fellow Kashmiris killed with torture…

“…They brought a man and hung him from the ceiling with iron chord around his wrists. In the middle of night we heard a sound and when we woke up he was lying dead on the floor with his wrist cut off and still tied to the chord. The next day no one could even know that someone had died in the night,” narrates an ex-militant in the film.

“…They used to put petrol in my anus; two bottles; three bottles. It was a situation where I could neither live nor die,” says another ex-militant.

The film has already started to make an impression as could be guessed from the comments posted in response to the trailer.

“Thank you for all the hard work and effort to show… The people around the world about Kashmir and its people,” commented a ‘netizen’, crazeahmad.

“Good to see at least some Indians are showing some sympathy instead of hate comments, I wish most Indians were like you, unfortunately most of them write hate comments and call us 'pakis' and 'traitors' without having the slightest idea of what is actually happening there and how they were suffering. Those comments only make us angrier and increase the hatred,” wrote rebelx2x.

[Kashmir Times]

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