Palestinian Youth Movement statement in support of Kashmiri struggle against colonialism & occupation:

We, the Palestinian Youth Movement, express our solidarity with the people of Kashmir as they continue to bravely resist occupation by Indian military forces.

For decades, the people of Kashmir have fought for their right to political sovereignty and autonomous recognition as a nation and a people. Article 370 of the Indian Constitution
guaranteed these rights and gave Kashmir special status that maintained its autonomy. This month, the Indian government revoked Article 370, resulting in the loss of Kashmir’s special administrative status. The Indian government has effectively stripped Kashmiris of their right to self-determination and forced them to answer to the government in New Delhi.

To enforce this decision on an unwilling people, India has deployed around one million Indian military forces to Kashmir, who are currently occupying universities, student hostels, police stations, court chambers, and other government buildings. It is expected that all telephone and internet services will soon be shut down to prevent communication to the outside world.

As Palestinian youth, we are all too familiar with the realities of foreign and military occupation at the cost of a people’s right to self-determination. Moreover, India’s Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, is actually the first in history to visit Israel and has worked to forge a personal, political, and militaristic relationship with the Zionist state. His foreign imposition of Indian nationalism on a people and land who have long fought for their own national autonomy is a denial of the right to self-determination, as much as the Zionist state’s actions are a denial of our right to self-determination to reclaim our homeland as Palestinians.

We firmly stand with the people of Kashmir in their struggle for liberation as they continue to bravely resist occupation of their land. #StandWithKashmir #Kashmir

If you want to protest for Kashmiris & there are no groups to work with where you live, the easiest way is to call around the local mosques to see if they would initiate a call. In the Rio Grande Valley on the border with Mexico, the mosques have consistently & repeatedly rallied for Palestinians, the Egyptian & Syrian Arab Springs, the Rohingya, & now for Kashmir. The Imams speak, bring their congregations, & always have impressive banners. You’ll also meet a lot of wonderful people.


A Kashmiri on the terror of the Indian military onslaught in Kashmir:

Yesterday, at the Srinagar airport, a few of us stood huddled around the only working tv near one of the boarding gates that was showing the news. I, a Kashmiri, who had spent the past week panicking, partly paralyzed with fear and uncertainty, not knowing what imminent doom lay in store scrambled across the waiting area to seek a spot within an earshot of the TV. I couldn’t see what was going on, but I could hear the address. I knew at that moment that I was going from ‘not knowing’ to ‘knowing’, all the while debating with myself whether I even wanted to know what horror would befall us now, a people who had already been subjected to so many shades of horror before.
So there I was, listening to the news at a nearby spot, as if eavesdropping on the future of my own home and my people– because that’s what you do when you live under siege, holed up inside your houses without any communication to the outside world, imagining the worst in your head as the streets that run near your locale like veins inside a human are populated by armed men who share neither your history nor language.
And there I was, suddenly hit with all the weight that comes with knowing the sinister designs that will shape the future of Kashmir. But there I also was, knowing my family and my relatives and neighbours and my people were trapped in their homes, tense and confused, some probably ill and unable to get to the hospitals, curfewed in and worse, still not knowing what had just happened.

Today, a day later, there has still been no news from Kashmir as all channels of communication have been cut. And now, the curse of not knowing what is happening falls upon us: those outside.

–Huzaafa

Believe me, it brings my weathered old soul to tears to see expressions of solidarity between Kashmiris, Rohingya, Palestinians, Uyghur, Syrians, & others who are facing war, occupation, genocide. Now if the rest of us can just learn from them & follow in kind.

Several Rohingya activists are going red for Kashmir because they are humanist, understand the scale of persecution, & because Kashmiris have long stood with the Rohingya against genocide. Human solidarity is a very powerful force that can change the world. It is the iron law of social transformation.

The deserted streets of Kashmir under lock down by nearly a million Indian occupying troops.

A telling photo by Kashmir based photographer Danish Ismail. It took almost 12 hours for it to reach the photo desk in India due to communication blackout by Indian authorities, barbed wire & deserted roads.

“Srinagar is a city of soldiers & spools of concertina wire.”

An account by Muzamil Jaleel, one of the few journalists able to leave Kashmir since the military onslaught began.