
By Uzma Ehtasham
In the mist-shrouded valleys of north Kashmir, life has long been defined by a tension that is both immediate and enduring. The latest incident, in which the Indian army shot dead a young man accused of infiltration, is neither an anomaly nor a singular tragedy. It is instead a grim continuation of a pattern in which ordinary lives are subsumed into the machinery of conflict. For the residents of the valley, such killings are not headlines to be read and forgotten—they are reminders of a daily reality marked by fear, suspicion, and loss. Each death deepens the fractures of trust, amplifying the sense that justice is a distant abstraction rather than a lived experience.
Kashmir’s plight, while acute, reflects a deeper and wider malaise that spans beyond the region. Across India, the treatment of religious minorities has increasingly become a matter of international concern. Reports from watchdogs such as the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) detail a pattern of systemic discrimination that moves from rhetoric to law, from harassment to violence. Muslims, Christians, and other minority communities find themselves navigating a landscape in which their faith can render them vulnerable not only to societal prejudice but to the full apparatus of the state. Anti-conversion laws, selectively enforced, serve as instruments of coercion, and in several cases, legislation has been bent to target communities perceived as outsiders in their own homeland.
Perhaps most unsettling in the USCIRF’s analysis is its pointed attention to India’s ruling structures, including the ideological parent of the government, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), and the country’s intelligence apparatus. The recommendation for targeted measures—asset freezes, travel restrictions, and other sanctions—signals an intensifying international impatience with what is perceived as the state’s complicity in creating conditions of fear and marginalization. These are not abstract warnings. They are an acknowledgment that the erosion of rights is not simply a domestic issue; it is a threat to the credibility of India’s constitutional promise of secularism, pluralism, and democratic freedom.
When these threads—the militarization of Kashmir and the systemic marginalization of minorities—are considered together, they reveal a nation straining under the weight of an ideology that privileges conformity over conversation and majoritarian dominance over pluralism. The consequences are not confined within national borders. Kashmir remains a flashpoint not only because of longstanding territorial disputes but because of the manner in which governance itself is exercised there. The signals sent by repression, surveillance, and arrests ripple outward, influencing regional stability and inviting the attention of global powers concerned with peace, human rights, and security.
The wider lesson is sobering. Nations that undermine the rights of their citizens sow instability not only internally but externally. When the state becomes a vector for fear, when citizenship is conditional upon conformity, and when institutions designed to protect rights are instead instruments of repression, the consequences are felt across borders, through migration, diplomatic tension, and the erosion of trust in governance. What is happening in Kashmir is not an isolated humanitarian incident; it is emblematic of the broader challenge facing India as it reconciles its democratic ideals with the ideological impulses of its current leadership. In this context, the international community’s response must move beyond statements of concern.
Moral authority alone will not suffice. Practical measures, from targeted sanctions to enhanced scrutiny of state actions, are necessary to prevent the further erosion of rights and to uphold the principles enshrined in international human rights law. The imperative is not abstract. It is urgent: to protect the voices that remain, to shield communities from the machinery of coercion, and to reaffirm the universality of basic freedoms that should not be conditional on geography, ethnicity, or religion. The violence in Kashmir and the systemic pressures faced by minorities elsewhere in India are not inevitable.
They are the product of policy choices, political calculation, and an ideological framework that prizes control over conversation. Yet for every policy, there exists the potential for resistance, for advocacy, and for intervention. The challenge for the world is to act decisively before patterns of repression become entrenched and before hope is extinguished for those living in fear. History, in its quiet accumulation of injustice, teaches that delays in action rarely protect the vulnerable—they exacerbate their suffering.
Kashmir is a landscape of beauty, culture, and history. Yet, for the people who live there, its mountains and rivers are now inseparable from checkpoints, curfews, and funerals. The moral imperative is clear: the international community must not wait until the final embers of dissent are extinguished. Protection of human rights, defence of democratic values, and the maintenance of regional stability are inseparable. What occurs in the valley today reverberates far beyond its borders, and the world’s response—or its continued silence—will shape not only the future of Kashmir but the credibility of global commitments to justice, dignity, and the rule of law.
(The writer is a public health professional, journalist, and possesses expertise in health communication, having keen interest in national and international affairs, can be reached at uzma@metro-morning.com)
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