Indian short film highlights enforced disappearances, fake encounters in IIOJK

by Abbas Adil

A nine plus-minute short film Anthem for Kashmir accompanied by a Tamil song highlights the issues of enforced disappearances and fake encounters in Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir (IIOJK).

A product of award-winning documentary filmmaker Anand Patwardhan and Sandeep Ravindranath, and Carnatic singer TM Krishna, the short film was released on May 12.

It coincided with the 1,000 days of the abrogation of Article 370 on May 1, which revoked the special status of the occupied territory.

The documentary filmmaker Sandeep Ravindranath told Indian news agency The Wire that the idea for this project had been in the works for a while now – ever since Article 370 was read down in August 2019.

Ravindranath has made several shorts in the past, including Tharattu Pattu, The Bookshelf, Santhana Gopala, Diary of an Outsider and Sub Brothers.

Through the short film, the filmmaker tried to contradict the popularity of the movies like The Kashmir Files, which had been widely criticised for trying to villainise Muslims in the IIOJK.

He said the aim and the motivation were to also try and portray the truth of today’s Kashmir.

“When you’re there [in Kashmir], you really get the sense that this is occupied territory. There are army personnel with machine guns every 100 metres, armoured vehicles with gun ports, and check posts. The visuals cater towards establishing psychology of fear and anxiety,” Ravindranath continued.

The video-maker wanted to bring out the everyday violence and troubles often glossed over in both mainstream media and popular culture – “civilian deaths, enforcement disappearances, fake encounters, half-widows”.

The short, fictionalised narrative highlights the issues of enforced disappearances and fake encounters in IIOJK, and the impact they have on families left behind or witnessing the everyday violence.

The music video has been shot entirely in Kashmir, in areas where Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) is in place. It was inspired by the ‘deafening’ silence around the “struggle of a people” among other things, Ravindranath said.

“I have Kashmiri friends, it was a hard time. I was not able to get in touch with them as communication was affected at the time. More than that, even if I did not have Kashmiri friends… It is about a people struggling,” he added.

He said the filming was not easy, given the situation (restrictions) in the Valley and the pandemic.

The video was shot amid Covid-19 restrictions, but local support in the town they were in, near the Line of Control, made it possible, Ravindranath added.

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