Don’t trigger a war: Voices from India and Pakistan /Rashmi Talwar @rushrk1 /DailyO

 

 

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Don’t trigger a war : Voices from India and Pakistan

Villagers asked to evacuate are enraged at the media hype; their homes are almost empty and crop is being wasted

Rashmi Talwar 

“Hun jang na lava deo!” (Now, don’t trigger a war!) – shouts an enraged villager, Kulwant Singh, at us. He is the caretaker of the local gurdwara of village Daoke on the India-Pakistan border.

We smile awkwardly; the villagers are visibly angry, especially the elderly. “Media nu TRP di payi rendi hai, aasan da koi nai sochda,” (media is concerned about TRPs, nobody thinks of us border villagers!) they say.

Some join the chorus as they see our cameras and notebooks. Villagers are keenly watching the high decibel rhetoric belted out by TV channels, where 80 per cent of news is on the India-Pakistan trajectory, in the heightened tension of the last two weeks.

Villagers in the border belt with Pakistan were ordered to evacuate after Indian armed forces carried out “surgical strikes” on September 29, in retaliation for the September 18 attack in Uri, Jammu & Kashmir, attributed to Pakistan’s terrorist network.

Daoke is situated bang on the border where the international boundary’s barbed wire fence is a mere crow’s flight away. So close to the border that one milkman Bitu’s mobile number shows the country code of +92 (Pakistan).

Even as hectic activity was noticed, as ripe paddy crop is being harvested speedily in villages, due to panic, their anger is not amiss.

Many villagers owning fields beyond the barbed wire fencing on the Indian side of the border are barred from tending to their fields by the Border Security Force. They rue the accrued losses and moan that their loans will remain unpaid, as no one can tend to their standing, ripened crops.

With many of the village’s women and children having left for safer places, much of the responsibility and burden of household chores, livestock and fields has fallen upon the frail shoulders of the elderly, while fields within the barbed area with newly ripened paddy are being managed by sons whose wives and children are staying with relatives in the cities.

Daoke’s Satwant Kaur cries: “In this old age, when I needed rest and comfort, I have been pushed to tend to cooking, cleaning and all house chores alone, as both my daughter-in-laws and their children were sent to their maternal homes. An old woman is expected to deal with everything!”

The reluctance of the villagers to evacuate has reasons. Whenever tensions build up between India and Pakistan, they fall in the first line of evacuation. At places, a mere road separates the defence drain and the fields of villages.

“Besides the cumbersome drill of packing and transporting belongings and requesting city counterparts to help, crops too suffer,” says one Gurmeet. The biggest reason, however, as Gurmeet puts it: “This time it is unlike earlier evacuations, which were serious. This one is merely precautionary and anticipatory.”

They are also loath to evacuate because they know they will get the whiff of any serious preparations for an attack through tip-offs from across the border, where they have contacts.

The contacts are through the ignominious drug trade. Villages Hawellian, Narli, Bharopal and Daoke are well known for their drug links. Incidentally, the controversial film Udta Punjab on the drug menace in Punjab, is peppered with mentions of these villages in conversations.

After evacuation orders by local deputy commissioners (DC), the villagers of Bharopal, similarly poised on the India-Pakistan border, are also restless. Many villagers owning fields beyond the barbed wire fencing on the Indian side of the border are barred from tending to their fields by the Border Security Force. They rue the accrued losses and moan that their loans will remain unpaid, as no one can tend to their standing, ripened crops. The

situation is alike in Kakkar, Rajatal, Neshta, Pandhori, Manj, Kawe, Bachiwind, and Ranian along the border, where very few have left homes.

Punjab’s chief minister Parkash Singh Badal had deputed DCs to supervise evacuation, on the possibility of retaliation by Pakistan, and declared: “These are precautionary steps to prevent civilian loss in case of any misadventure from across the border.”

Badal claimed to have released Rs 1 crore for each border district. When asked about the compensation, the villagers of Bharopal exclaimed: “Not a drop of compensation arrived on our doorstep!”

Amritsar’s DC said 15 camps and a score of buses were spared to ferry people. The villagers of Daoke are ignorant of any such travel arrangements.

Following recent incidents, 11 government school buildings were notified for residents of the border belt. Arrangement at Khasa school for about 500 people has no takers. In Chhabal village of Tarn Taran, about 30 rooms are in readiness to accommodate 250 people. Very few have arrived in relief camps falling in the adjoining district of Tarn Taran along the border.

They preferred to take refuge in gurdwaras nearby where food is assured via langars. All private and government educational institutions within 10km radius of the international border remain shut. Those living near the border have been asked to switch off lights at night.

Many of the villagers have witnessed three wars, including 1965, 1971, Kargil in 1999 and the army stand-off in the aftermath of the Parliament attack in 2001-02.

Jasbir Singh (82), a village elder of Bharopal, had even witnessed the Partition of 1947. Village Neshtha’s Balwant Singh articulates: “We will not move out till the time shots are fired, the artillery is moved in and the defence canal is filled with water. How much baggage can we take? Our livestock, grain and household items were looted when we left the last time following the Parliament attack.”

This journalist saw patrolling by horse-mounted Army personnel, besides police and armoured vehicles of the BSF in border villages. In the stand-off in 2001-02, when villages were evacuated, India and Pakistan’s soldiers stood eye-to-eye.

Fields along the barbed wire fencing and beyond were heavily mined and many casualties of defence personnel and villagers were reported due to accidents during movement of artillery, besides incidents of fire in mined fields.

BSF deputy commandant HS Sidhu confirms: “The evacuation exercise is a precautionary measure. BSF has enhanced vigil and augmented forces along the India-Pakistan border. Media hype and the acrimony between the two nations cannot be ignored.”

Other precautionary measures include sounding hospitals and keeping medicine supply in readiness. Unconfirmed reports are also trickling in of fortifying of ICP (integrated checkpost, Attari-Wagah) and cleaning of bunkers on the border.

Even as anxiety prevails in villages, India-Pakistan trade seemed untouched by any tension. Balwinder Singh, in-charge of the port at Attari-Wagah, revealed that as many as 190 trucks carrying cement, gypsum, rock salt, dry fruit and dry dates arrived from Pakistan and 55 trucks with tomatoes from Maharashtra, cotton and buffalo meat drove to Pakistan.

Passenger count on the international route seemed affected. Four times-weekly Punj-Aab Express, the Amritsar-Lahore bus, didn’t ply as no passenger was booked on it. Passenger flow via the bi-weekly Samjhauta Express train between the two countries remained at about 150 persons on both sides on Thursday. Besides this, only five passengers each crossed from either side via Sada-E-Sarhad Delhi-Lahore bus on Saturday.

Twitter :rushrk1

FIRST PUBLISHED IN DAILYO

URL :http://www.dailyo.in/politics/surgical-strikes-uri-attack-pakistan-daoke-loc-bharopal-evacuation-parkash/story/1/13216.html

 

 

32 responses to this post.

  1. Posted by Manpreet Sandhu on October 5, 2016 at 8:43 PM

    Osmm picss

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    • You have to consult your state code. In fact, I am doing that tomorrow for a rural state which I now call home. I have a feeling if you live in Texas, you are going to be O.K. on your own prryoetp. Anyone who comes in on you is not going to be O.K.

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  2. Posted by Vee Kay Sharma on October 5, 2016 at 8:44 PM

    Neither India nor Pak can afford to go to war
    These are just scary gimmicks played by the PMs of both sides to save face and take political mileage.
    Think with cool mind what the government or army is staking claim about a number of assaults on launching pads based in POK is possible without any casualties to Indian commandos .
    Thousands of families from border districts of Punjab were forced to evacuate without notice forcing them to abandon their home and hearth and leave behind their ripened paddy crop standing in the field untended.
    Do these all acts justify the claims?
    You have 56″thorax but you can not have the courage of IRON Lady-INDRA GANDHI.
    P.S These comments were made before going through the main story.
    Hats off to you Rashmi for presenting a true picture of the people’s sufferings in the rural border belt.

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  3. Posted by Indu Aurora on October 5, 2016 at 8:45 PM

    No War !!!! Please Only Friendship & Brotherhood. …Hope Peace & Reasoning Prevails. …

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  4. Posted by S Affan Yesvi on October 5, 2016 at 8:45 PM

    Peace is the only way forward. Nice 👍 writeup

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  5. Posted by Kaul Ravinder on October 5, 2016 at 8:46 PM

    This is a very thought provoking article. In an atmosphere of war mongering this is a voice of sanity. As Sahir has said “Jang to khud hi ek mas-ala hai, Jang kya mas-alon ka hal degi” Kudos for your apt and extensive coverage….

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  6. Posted by Munish Inder Singh on October 5, 2016 at 8:46 PM

    No one here is to follow what is wise…..
    but all pursue Hypes….

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  7. Posted by Rashmi Talwar on October 5, 2016 at 8:47 PM

    Appreciate all who took the time to read this… Meanwhile, Let me explain that in a spot story, the circumstances and situations are so fluid that they change every minute !…Thank you all

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  8. Posted by Nivedita Khandekar on October 5, 2016 at 8:49 PM

    @rushrk1 Fantastic ground report Rashmi ji …

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  9. Posted by Nivedita Khandekar on October 5, 2016 at 8:49 PM

    Empty homes, standing crop unattended – price one pays for being a farmer in border village, finds @rushrk1

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  10. Posted by Peace_Noble on October 5, 2016 at 8:50 PM

    Retweeted DailyO
    How much 82 yrs old J Singh can pack up while evacuating from India-Pakistan border? “Don’t trigger war” @rushrk1 @bhensaa #Peace

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  11. Posted by Sumant Wandekar on October 5, 2016 at 8:50 PM

    Retweeted a Tweet you were mentioned in
    Oct 2:
    Empty homes, standing crop unattended – price one pays for being a farmer in border village, finds @rushrk1

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  12. Posted by Ankur Agarwal on October 5, 2016 at 8:51 PM

    ‏@ankur0906
    @nivedita_Him @rushrk1 lot of points deliberately missed in this filmy article specially MHA last 3 advisory…

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  13. Posted by Sameer Sharma on October 5, 2016 at 8:52 PM

    ‏@ssharmapersonal Oct 2
    @DailyO_ @IndiaToday @rushrk1 Dont equate. War has been thrust upon us.

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  14. Posted by Ankur Agarwal on October 5, 2016 at 8:52 PM

    ‏@ankur0906 Oct 2
    @nivedita_Him @rushrk1 anyways now such article are immaterial; things have changed huge in last 2hrs. civilians injured in mortar round J&K

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    • Posted by Rashmi Talwar on October 5, 2016 at 8:53 PM

      Yes they did early this morning @ankur0906 @nivedita_Him @ANI_news, the circumstances are fluid

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    • Posted by Nivedita Khandekar on October 5, 2016 at 8:55 PM

      ‏@nivedita_Him Oct 2
      @ankur0906 Let us ask what @rushrk1 has to say. I feel, for a ground report, this is good enough.

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  15. Posted by Nivedita Khandekar on October 5, 2016 at 8:54 PM

    ‏@nivedita_Him 19h19 hours ago
    @ankur0906 Good for farmers. Story changes every few hours in such times of conflict. @rushrk1 check this …

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  16. Posted by Mihir Sarkar on October 5, 2016 at 8:55 PM

    ‏@mihirasom Oct 2
    @DailyO_ @IndiaToday @rushrk1 allow the pakis to come and kick us repeatedly.

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  17. Posted by Rahul Mishra on October 5, 2016 at 8:56 PM

    ‏@arenmishra Oct 2
    @DailyO_ @rushrk1 yes, no to war. But we got to terminate Pakistan before they kill lakhs of Indians. the truth, Pak has bcom suicide bomber

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    • grande esap8±a&#Ã230;…ojalá sigan jugando así..soy chileno y brasil siempre empieza mal los primeros partidos…pero despues no hay quien lo pare…saludos y visiten mi blog..voten quien gana el mundial..y vean mi equipo el FC. JOGA PULENTO..chao

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  18. Posted by Rashmi Talwar on October 5, 2016 at 8:56 PM

    India needs to act “VerySensibly” Losses would b huge on both sides This will not be a conventional war.It may destroy everything in an hour https://twitter.com/arenmishra/

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  19. Posted by KashmirUprising on October 5, 2016 at 8:57 PM

    ‏@KashUnrest Oct 2
    @DailyO_ @rushrk1 Nation Wants to Know.. Border areas asking why election bound villages in Punjab asked to vacate and not villages in Rajasthan

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  20. Posted by Bramhjeet Bhadoriya on October 5, 2016 at 8:58 PM

    liked a Tweet you were mentioned in
    Oct 2:
    @timesofindia @rushrk1 Our bollywwod actors SK and MB are sleeping peacefully bcoz our jawaan fighting at border #Baramulla

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  21. Posted by Praveen kumar on October 5, 2016 at 8:58 PM

    ‏@praveenktr63 Oct 2
    @spbhattacharya @rushrk1 After finishing search operation , Army should initiate one more surgical strike, this time in lahore #Baramulla

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  22. Posted by Furquan Moharkan on October 5, 2016 at 8:59 PM

    Retweeted
    Oct 2:
    Wars shud b fought by leaders, nt young, older men declare it, young fight n die. @rushrk1 @imFmoharkan @bukharishujaat @Shahnawaz_JK

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  23. Posted by Arindam Datta on October 5, 2016 at 9:00 PM

    Safety of residents come first!! People being evacuated and taken to safer places after ceasefire violation by #Pakistan in #Akhnoor. pic.twitter.com/0fBJHxZ2wI

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  24. Posted by sardar sikh on October 5, 2016 at 9:00 PM

    Nothing cud be more dangerous than possession of nuclear weapons by country that sponsors&exports terror #terrorstatepak #PakStandsIsolated pic.twitter.com/tgbXwSccJg

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