Apart from Chief Minster Omar Abdullah and his government, politicians in the PDP, and among the secessionists, who cynically cashed in on the deaths to further their agenda must also be held to account.
Last summer, the bodies of two women were washed ashore on the banks of the Rambiara river in Shopian. Eight people were to die, and some 400 suffer injuries as the embers fanned by the deaths set off fires across urban Kashmir.
For the angry young Islamists who spearheaded the protests, the deaths of the two women were murders — murders, moreover, carried out by a predatory Hindu state in its campaign to annihilate Kashmiris.
The body of one of them, the Jammu and Kashmir High Court Bar Association’s investigation recorded witnesses as stating, “was lying half naked on dry sand. Her clothes were torn and hair, clothes and body were dry. Blood was dripping from her nose and it appeared sindoor had been thrown in her forehead.”
“During our investigations,” association leader G.N. Shaheen said, “we found that the perpetrators belonged to a particular community and they had even vandalised the bodies of the victims.” In case anyone had missed the point, Mr. Shaheen added the rapists were “fanatic Hindus.”
Now, the Central Bureau of Investigation has filed a charge sheet which rips apart the claims of the secessionist-linked Bar Association, politicians like People’s Democratic Party leader Mehbooba Mufti and much of the media. Backed by forensic detective work by the All-India Institute of Medical Sciences Department of Forensic Medicine and Toxicology, the Central Forensic Sciences Laboratory in New Delhi, the Forensic Sciences Laboratory in Madhuban and the Indian Agricultural Research Institute, the CBI has concluded that the women were neither raped nor murdered.
Inside the bodies of the victims, AIIMS forensic experts found several pieces of evidence suggesting drowning. Pin-sized petechial haemorrhages were found on the membranes of their lungs and bronchi. Larger patches of Paltauf’s haemorrhages — bluish-red areas found in the lungs of about half of all drowning victims — were also visible. Doctors also discovered accumulations of fluid within the alveoli, suggesting pulmonary oedema, another sign of drowning.
None of the findings in themselves was conclusive. So, experts at the Central Forensic Science Laboratory in New Delhi and the Forensic Sciences Laboratory at Madhuban proceeded to conduct tests which matched the soil recovered from the victims’ lungs with the earth in the Rambiara. Further tests showed that diatoms — a kind of eukaryotic algae — inside the victims’ lungs were similar to those found among some organisms in the river. During autopsy, the doctors also recovered small insects from the victims’ lungs. Experts at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute identified the insects as silverfish — small, wingless creatures commonly found under the bark of trees, under rocks, in rotten logs and among leaf litter.
But the finding that the victims were drowned did not rule out the possibility of murder — or rape. The AIIMS evidence shot down the first possibility in short order. The body of one victim did indeed have a lacerated wound in the forehead, likely caused by hitting against a hard surface but the forensic examiners believed it was “not sufficient to cause death in the ordinary course.” There were no external ante-mortal injuries on the other victim.
No evidence of rape, the experts stated, emerged either. The hymen of one of the victims was found intact. Four Shopian hospital staff members — Javed Iqbal Malik, Tariq Ahmad Tantrey, Mohammad Ismail Sheikh and Mohammad Ismail Sodagar — corroborated the findings, telling the CBI that there were no injuries on the private parts of the victims. Their clothes, six other witnesses told the CBI, were also intact at the time the bodies were found.
Faked evidence
How could the AIIMS findings be so different from that of two separate teams of doctors who carried out earlier autopsies? Breathtaking incompetence may have played a role. Shopian doctors Bilal Hassan and Nazia Hassan ruled out drowning as a cause of death, claiming to have carried out a flotation test using samples of lung tissue from a victim. In fact, the AIIMS team determined, the tissue was from the heart.
Moreover, the lung flotation test has long been known to be less-than-conclusive proof of drowning — especially in fresh water, which has a lower density than salt water. Janson Payne-James, Anthony Busuttil and William S. Smock’s Forensic Medicine: Clinical and Pathological Aspects explains that the test rests on the fact that lung weights are usually higher in people who were drowned. But “a normal weight is possible in some drowning cases.” The more sophisticated tests conducted by the CBI experts were either unavailable or unknown to the Shopian doctors.
Nighat Shaheen, Ghulam Qadir Sofi and Maqbool Mir, who made up the second autopsy team, are also charged by the CBI with fabricating evidence. The team insisted that a victim’s hymen was damaged — an assertion the AIIMS experts’ videotaped autopsy debunks. Evidence that Dr. Shaheen had fabricated evidence, first reported in The Hindu, also figured in the CBI investigation. She claimed to have taken vaginal swabs from the victims, but later tests revealed that they had in fact been lifted from unconnected women. The CBI claims that Dr. Shaheen offered them three contradictory accounts of how this had come about — including a claim, now disproved, that she had supplied a vaginal swab from her own body under duress.
The CBI investigators were unable to arrive at a precise determination of just how the women were drowned. Human rights groups who have investigated the case say water in the Rambiara was just ankle-deep.
But official records gathered by the CBI show that the river was flowing at its year-high flood, 228 cubic feet per second, just days before the women’s death. There is, of course, no direct relationship between the flow of water in the river and its depth. However, the CBI discovered multiple witness testimonies suggesting that the river was indeed flowing at dangerous levels — the most important being a videotaped media interview given by the husband of one of the victims the day after her death. He asserted that the water level in the river was so high that “even a man could not have crossed it.” Independent witnesses, the CBI states, corroborated this claim, with one adding it was also the opinion of the victim’s family. They also noted that two separate witnesses earlier said the victims had froth around the nose, a classic sign of drowning.
Efforts to link police personnel to the crime went nowhere. Much of the case rested on the testimony of Ghulam Mohaiuddin Lone and Abdul Rashid Pampori, who claimed to have heard the women crying for help from inside a police vehicle parked on the Zawoora Bridge. However, the CBI noted, their testimony was contradictory on at least five issues. Later, the CBI says, it acquired statements from the men that they had been coerced into making the allegations. Forensic tests on 23 police vehicles and 47 officers posted in the area also threw up no evidence that they were in any way linked to the deaths.
The Kashmir High Court Bar Association says it has a letter from AIIMS forensic medicine expert Sudhir Gupta, casting doubt on the forensic findings. Dr. Gupta has offered no independent corroboration of this claim; indeed, in an in-house AIIMS correspondence obtained by The Hindu, Dr. Gupta asked for a copy of the letter so he could give a “legitimate reply.” The AIIMS spat has led to some bizarre media allegations, including assertions that its experts helped to rig forensic evidence in the murder of a Delhi teenager — a case the institution had nothing to do with. Dr. Gupta, whose name was struck off the rolls of the Medical Council of India in 2004, on plagiarism charges, may or may not be a credible witness, but if there is any serious critique of the evidence marshalled by the CBI, it must be assessed and responded to.
Failing this, many must hold themselves to account for the bloodshed that followed the deaths in Shopian. Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and his government must take part of the blame. The government buckled under pressure from Islamists, transferring senior police officials who insisted that the deaths were an accident, suspended others on charges of destroying evidence and paving the way for the judicially-mandated arrests of four suspects, now exonerated. Politicians in the PDP, and among the secessionists, who cynically cashed in on the deaths to further their agenda must also be held to account. Media and civil rights groups, which paid little attention to evidence that from the outset cast doubt on the rape-murder story, cannot evade responsibility either.
Many in Jammu and Kashmir, reared on the half-truths and deceits fed by large sections of the media, are likely to believe the CBI account. It is imperative that proceedings from here on be carried out with complete transparency to avoid further muddying of the waters.
Keywords: violence, death, Shopian rape incident, Jammu and Kashmir


Comments:
This is a truly impressive piece of journalistic opinion. With admiration, Ashutosh Varshney Professor Department of Political Science Brown University Box 1844 Providence, RI 02912, USA
We cannot wish away the fact that the problem in Kashmir is not just of law and order.It is a political problem which calls for politically tactful handling. A political approach to solving the problem will not brook alienation of local politicians of various hues. The PPD is a significant political force in Kashmir valley and the Central government cannot ignore its voice. The Central government and its agencies will lack credibility in their effort to investigate alleged attrocities in the State by the security forces without the help of the local political parties and professional groups like he Bar Association. Hence affirmative statements like 'Now, the Central Bureau of Investigation has filed a charge sheet which rips apart the claims of the secessionist-linked Bar Association, politicians like People's Democratic Party leader Mehbooba Mufti and much of the media' in the article is not conducive to the success of their efforts to establish the truth. The media will do well to stop short of passing judgements.
While other news media concentrate on sensationalism... The Hindu is a class apart!! If you want behind the facade truths, only place it would turn up (especially if its sombre and not sensationalised) is The Hindu...!! Hope the readership of The Hindu increases by the day!
The Government and the human rights groups should work to expose the evil designs of the secessionists. The secessionists and their supporters should be taken to task for the loss of human life and the miseries of unimaginable magnitude that was forced on the hapless citizens. We should have a programme to wean the younger generations away from the rot.
I had been waiting for The Hindu for an opinion on this since CBI had finished its investigation in the Shopian case. What a pity now that even with this evidence, the country cannot prosecute the PDP politicians, the secessionists, the Islamists and whoever was involved for the bloodshed and violence that followed the deaths. No doubt the Chief Minister must take responsibility, but justice should be served by prosecuting those involved first.
A great article. The Govt. of Omar Abdullah must take action against those who fabricated evidences, and misguided common people. But would it happen? I doubt.
It is definitely an admirable article. The details listed above were comprehensive to understand the understand the whole picture.
As every other person, I too expect some credible action to be taken on those secessionists who have cashed in the situation for their political gain. But, as an average Indian, I am afraid if any substantial action against these secessionists would be taken :(
Our 'secular' politicians whose main prerogative has been to appease the fanatics at the cost of silencing the moderate voice of reason are much to blame. The'human rights' groups have also faltered.
This is a great article. The Govt. of India should ban PDP for indulging in anti-national activities, as also the Hurriyat Conference. Islamists in Kashmir go to any lengths to demonise India, they not only use every opportunity to do this but also create some, is now proved with this CBI inquiry
Praveen Swami's method of journalism is something the rest of the press community should be proud of. The Hindu should be very proud about its unambiguous and unwavering stands on issues ranging from Sri Lankan conflict to Shopian case! Sathyameva jayathe!
Excellent journalism ! This exposes the congress govt's weakness and biased decisions on secular issues. It also emphasizes their desperation on vote bank politics so much that they are willing to overlook the facts in this case just to keep a few people happy.
I have recently started reading The Hindu and am very much impressed by the factual, unbiased and unadulterated news that is being presented to the viewers. I must say that you are leagues ahead ! The rest of press community ought to take a cue from you rather than being paid mouthpieces of political parties.
The CBI deserves congratulations for its painstaking investigation, which nailed the lies. The doctors who submitted false post-mortem reports should be prosecuted.