18 episodes

A series of podcasts by The Kashmir Walla on several issues of South Asia, impacting Jammu and Kashmir

The Kashmir Walla Podcasts The Kashmir Walla

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A series of podcasts by The Kashmir Walla on several issues of South Asia, impacting Jammu and Kashmir

    “I want to sleep just to see him”: Ordeal of a teenage militant’s mother

    “I want to sleep just to see him”: Ordeal of a teenage militant’s mother

    When she saw her son’s face she fell unconscious, unable to bear looking at him. With her son’s face etched into the memory, she now wants him to visit her once, in her dream.

    “I want to sleep just to see him,” she said. “Just once!”

    The Kashmir Walla's senior reporter, Gafira Qadir, reads the story of Dilshada Gulzar, who lost her son to a gunfight.

    • 7 min
    Kashmir's Awradh-e-Fateh: Mysticism and politics

    Kashmir's Awradh-e-Fateh: Mysticism and politics

    A sonorous chorus of male devotees fills the air at dawn in many parts of Kashmir. After the conclusion of the fajr prayers at dawn, devotees have been chanting the Awradh-e-Fateh in Kashmir’s mosques since the fourteenth century.

    The Awradh is an anthology of Quranic verses and the centrality of monotheism in Islam. A large part of the Awradh also consists of the prophets sayings, the names of Allah, and expressions of gratitude and praise for Allah.

    It was introduced by the traveler saint, Mir Syed Ali Hamdani, popularly known as Shah-e-Hamdan, who arrived in Kashmir in the fourteenth century and popularised Islam among Kashmir’s masses.

    In this week’s podcast, host Sarwat Javaid takes a dive into the mysticism and politics of the Awradh in Kashmir. We have with us, Qurat-ul-Ain, who is a Ph.D. scholar in Islamic Studies from Shah-e-Hamdan Institute of Islamic Studies at the University of Kashmir, and Mohammad Ashraf Wani, who is a historian.

    • 25 min
    Implications of the DDC results on Jammu region

    Implications of the DDC results on Jammu region

    On 26 December 2020, Prime Minister Narendra Modi asserted that the District Development Council (DDC) elections in Jammu and Kashmir opened a new chapter in the region’s politics. He said that it was a "moment of pride" for India.

    Contrary to the Bharatiya Janata Party’s claims of having established its acceptability across Jammu and Kashmir, the party’s performance in the DDC elections paints a different picture.

    The BJP won just 75 of the 280 DDC seats, just three of them in the Kashmir Valley. On the other hand, the People's Alliance for Gupkar Declaration (PAGD) won 110 seats, and the BJP arch-rivals the Congress won 26 seats. The recently formed Apni Party managed to win just 12 seats, while the remaining 50 were won by independent candidates. Counting on two seats was halted after questions were raised over the citizenship of some of the candidates.

    • 15 min
    Roshni Act: Crisis of governance credibility

    Roshni Act: Crisis of governance credibility

    A fresh crisis is brewing in Jammu and Kashmir. After New Delhi imposed a series of laws redefining permanent residents of and allowing non-locals to own lands in Jammu and Kashmir, the government has given way to fresh fears after it focussed its attention on beneficiaries of the now infamous Rohsni Act.

    On 28 November 2018, the Roshni Act was repealed by Satya pal Malik, the then Governor of Jammu and Kashmir. On 9 October this year, the Jammu and Kashmir High Court declared the Rohsni Act as “unconstitutional, contrary to law and unsustainable”. On 31 October, three weeks after the High Court order, the Jammu and Kashmir administration said that it had initiated a process to retrieve within six months all lands regularised under the Rohsni act.

    In our latest podcast, host, Sarwat Javaid speaks to Sharik Jan, an advocate about the Rohsni Act and the retrospective application of court judgments impacting the scheme’s legal beneficiaries as a precedent that could erode public faith in the system.

    • 20 min
    Is Kashmir's healthcare infrastructure equipped to deal with cardiac arrest?

    Is Kashmir's healthcare infrastructure equipped to deal with cardiac arrest?

    Recently, Mudasir Ali, a senior editor at Greater Kashmir died of a heart attack. His family alleged that the on-duty doctor at the hospital was not available immediately and when he did attend the patient, he delayed treatment. The unfortunate death brought back to focus the poor response to health emergencies in Kashmir. An inquiry was ordered into Mudasir’s death and as per Greater Kashmir, the investigation has admitted to multiple lapses in handling Mudasir. The committee has also recommended attaching the medical staff with the administrative office for the time being.

    But Mudasir is not the first and despite the government’s claims, it is likely that he will not be the last. This despite the fact that the Kashmir Valley’s Directorate of health services has about 1980 doctors in two thousand one hundred and two hospitals across Kashmir. Why then is the response to medical emergencies inadequate?

    In our latest podcast, host Sarwat Javaid explores this question. She speaks to  Irfan Ahmad Bhat, a consultant cardiologist at Srinagar’s SMHS hospital, to talk about the public health response. Doctor Bhat is also a member of the Save Heart Initiative, a pan Jammu and Kashmir network of medical staff who coordinate to help save patients who suffer cardiac arrests about the same.

    • 26 min
    In Jammu and Kashmir, concerns of Gujjar-Bakarwal community for their land

    In Jammu and Kashmir, concerns of Gujjar-Bakarwal community for their land

    While campaigning for candidates of the Bharatiya Janata Party in the Jammu Division's Rajouri district, former minister Priya Sethi of the BJP asserted that the abrogation of Articles 370 and 35A had ensured the political empowerment of the Gujjar, Bakarwal, and other Scheduled Tribes in the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir. Ironically, this statement was made just weeks after the J-K administration demolished temporary shelters of the tribal community in south Kashmir's Pahalgam area, besides issuing notices for the evacuation of such Shelters and lands across the Kashmir and Jammu divisions.

    At the center stage of this controversy is the non-implementation of the Forest Rights Act of 2006, whose provisions ensure the right to shelter in forests and the use of forest products except timber. For more than a decade, the central law -- that was a long pending demand of the Gujjar activists -- was not extended to J-K by the erstwhile state assembly dominated by Kashmiri unionists. In our latest podcast, Sarwat Javaid speaks to Zahid Parwaz Choudhary, a tribal rights activist, and Raja Muzaffar Bhat, an information transparency activist, about the predicaments of the tribal community and other forest dwellers.

    • 32 min

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