Rebel with a cause
Zubair A. Dar
When this most dreaded boy of central Kashmir was carried home, the shroud enveloping his body was stained red. Nine hours is a long gun battle but he was not killed inside the shrine where he was hiding – anxious troops fired at him indiscriminately even as he lay unconscious, outside the shrine. Mustafa Khan was dead at 19 – five years after he had first picked up a Kalashnikov rifle.
The troops wanted to kill him at all costs. So when the men in olive cordoned off Goigam village, 23 kilometers from Srinagar on July 30 in 2001, they didn’t stop when they found him hiding in a shrine along with two other militants. Ordinarily, the troops avoid an encounter with militants in shrines. They asked him to surrender. He didn’t. And soon, Khan was encircled by hundreds of guns – all of them targeting him.
The village mourned him – not because he was a brave fighter but for the painful tales of his lost childhood. Mustafa Khan’s journey from an innocent child to a deadly militant is a legend in the villages across central Kashmir. It’s a perfect script for a Bollywood blockbuster.
Then one day that year, a grenade was hurled on the Ikhwanis – Ama Kana and Muma Kana – in the village. Both survived the attack. Rumours went around that Mustafa was behind the attack. But the Kanas retaliated with might. “They came to our house looking for my son. They found him and I began to plead for mercy. They misbehaved with me, even beat me and pushed me to the ground,” recalls Shameema Begum, Khan’s mother. It was this incident that changed Mustafa’s life entirely. “He hit one of the Ikhwanis with a radio and dared him to touch his mother again,” adds Lone, who believes that the incident had tested the threshold of Mustafa’s tolerance.
Mustafa Khan was finally released from the 34 Rashtriya Rifles camp in Beerwah town of central Kashmir, some 17 kilometers from his village. He had been transferred there from Barzulla camp. “But the Ikhwanis asked him to report to them at the camp every month and bring his mother along when he came on August 1 that year,” says Khan’s father, Abdul Razak Khan, a shawl trader in those days. “At home, I advised my son not to indulge in any suspicious activity. He would not speak a word, except asking ‘why should my mother go to the army camp?’”
As a silent appreciation of Mustafa’s fight against the counter insurgents, thousands attended his funeral after he was killed in the gun-battle. He didn’t kill Ama Kana – the counter insurgent was killed days before Khan returned from Pakistan. But his resolve to fight other counter insurgents remained alive. “Mustafa Khan told me that he’d made it a point to give the counter insurgents a tough time,” says Bhat.
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May Allah give him heights place in jannah
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