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Pulwama attack: Why Afzal Guru remains so significant for life and death in Kashmir

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Poulomi Ghosh
Poulomi GhoshFeb 15, 2019 | 14:41

Pulwama attack: Why Afzal Guru remains so significant for life and death in Kashmir

We don’t know how Kashmir still sees Guru, the Sopore-based youth, who dropped out of his medical course and joined militancy.

Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru was hanged on February 9, 2013.

Kashmir, despite a change of guard in both the state and the Centre, didn’t move on, even a bit. The apparition of the hanging of Afzal Guru visits the Valley every year as the Joint Resistance Leadership (top separatist leaders of Kashmir) calls for an entire shutdown on the occasion of Afzal Guru’s hanging.

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And the Valley abides.

The dastardly attack in Pulwama, which killed 40 CRPF personnel, came close on the heels of the sixth anniversary of Afzal Guru's hanging. The attack was claimed by Jaish-e-Mohammed, a terror outfit which resurfaced in J&K in 2014 — one year after Afzal Guru’s hanging.

The apparition of Afzal Guru actually never left the Valley.

afzal_021519020534.jpg
A spectre who still haunts life and death in Kashmir: Afzal Guru. (Photo: PTI)

We know Afzal Guru was a Kashmir-based terrorist involved in the 2001 Parliament attack. We don’t know how Kashmir still sees Guru — the Sopore-based youth, who dropped out of his medical course and joined militancy.

In 2001, he was arrested, and in 2002, he was awarded the death sentence by a Delhi court. A long chain of events followed, including the High Court of Delhi upholding the sentence in 2003 and the Supreme Court rejecting his appeal in 2005.

Execution is still a debated issue. But Afzal Guru's death sentence triggered debates pertaining to some purported grey areas. Human rights activists and a section of the intelligentsia rallied against Afzal Guru’s death sentence, alleging that there were gaping holes in the investigation. While he was accused of sheltering the attackers in some versions, there were other versions in which he was one of the ‘attackers’. The other two co-accused, Professor SAR Geelani and Showkat Guru (Afzal Guru’s cousin), were also given death sentences, which were later acquitted.

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Pulwama and more: The JeM has been strengthening its Afzal Guru Squad in J&K. (Photo of Pulwama attack: Reuters)

Almost a decade later, in 2013, Afzal Guru was hanged in a secret operation codenamed ‘Three star’. Then President Pranab Mukherjee had dismissed his mercy plea and thus, preparations began. Maintaining utmost secrecy, Afzal Guru was hanged in Tihar Jail and his body was buried inside the jail. His family members were not informed — which was reportedly a ‘breach’ in law, claim critics and supporters of Guru.

A year after, Jaish was reactivated in J&K — with a special group named 'Afzal Guru Squad. This was to avenge Afzal Guru’s hanging.

Since then, multiple attacks took place in the Valley, bearing the signature of this group.

Apart from the JeM, the Pulwama attack has no direct link with Afzal Guru. That it could be revenge for the killing of Usman, nephew of JeM chief Masood Azhar, is also being surmised on.

At one end of the politicking is PDP chief Mehbooba Mufti who has joined the voices demanding the return of Afzal Guru’s mortal remains to Kashmir.

On the other end, is the human story of Afzal Guru’s son Galib Guru who passed the higher secondary school examination with a distinction in 2018.

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And in the middle is the brutality of the Pulwama attack.

The spectre of Afzal Guru looms over all these, and over the Valley even today.

Last updated: February 15, 2019 | 17:03
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