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Kashmir women fight 'obscenity'
August 31, 2005 – (BBC News) Eight veiled
women gather outside a shop selling alcohol on the ground floor
of a hotel in Srinagar, in Indian-administered Kashmir and start
ransacking it.
They chant Islamic slogans.
One of them lights a match to set the shop on fire but is stopped
by others for fear that the fire might engulf the entire complex.
The women comprise the Maryam Squad of the Dukhtaran-e-Milat (Daughters
of the Nation).
The squad is named after the Virgin Mary.
The chief of Dukhtaran-e-Milat, Asiya Andrabi, herself leads the
squad.
Ms Andrabi is a well-known separatist leader who spent a year in
jail with her then breastfeeding child.
"According to the Koran, liquor is the mother of all vices.
We have been requested by the local residents to destroy this liquor
shop here," she says.
A crowd that watched the women smash liquor bottles, endorsed her
claim.
"It has affected our children. We told [the chief minister]
Mufti not to open this shop here. But we were told it is a sign
of normalcy returning to the state," one person said.
Another man said: "These women have taken a bold step. We'll
support them."
'Illegal' attacks
There was no sign of the police while the women smashed the bottles
of alcohol.
But the deputy inspector general of police, HK Lohia, told the BBC
that "such attacks are illegal".
"Police will act against anyone breaking the law," he
said.
Apart from alcohol the Maryam Squad has also launched a campaign
against prostitution.
They visit a brothel in the Habba Kadal locality of the city and
demand that it be closed down.
Before launching its most recent campaign, the Dukhtaran-e-Milat
organised a function in honour of a barber-turned reformer, Subhan
Hajam.
The late Hajam carried out a single-handed campaign against prostitution
in Srinagar in the first half of the 20th century.
The government banned brothels in response to his campaign.
There are no legal red light areas in Srinagar or any other part
of Indian-administered Kashmir but prostitution has been going on
nonetheless.
It flourished in Srinagar before the outbreak of armed conflict
16 years ago.
Mr Lohia says that "small modules, dealing in flesh trade,
are still operating".
He said the police have busted about eight such rackets so far this
year.
Larger aims
The Dukhtaran-e-Milat has issued a diktat to operators of restaurants
and internet cafes to remove booths where there are reports of young
men and women getting intimate.
Asiya Andrabi says the campaign against prostitution and alcohol
has been launched from the capital city but will gradually be extended
to all parts of the state.
Alcohol shops as well as cinemas were closed down in the Kashmir
Valley in the autumn of 1989 after the outbreak of separatist violence.
They have started re-opening in some areas in the past couple of
years.
The Dukhtaran-e-Milat launched a campaign for the wearing of the
burqa (veil) by Muslim women in the early 1990s.
Its activists sprayed paint on women who did not wear a burqa.
The campaign succeeded but its success was short-lived.
A large majority of women have abandoned the veil.
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/4198768.stm
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