Award-winning photojournalist Javed Dar | The Wire
Dar says there have been many instances in the last month when photojournalists in Kashmir were stopped from covering the protests. They were also often unable to reach their offices in time to file the day’s photos since their curfew passes were rejected several times by the police and CRPF troops manning the streets. “We also have to take risks of going past barricades put up by the troops and protestors from where other people would normally come back,” says Dar, adding that what happens there depends on the mood of troops and police near the barricades. “Many times we are not allowed to go past the road barricades and have to turn back disappointed, without getting the pictures from the spot.”
The recent ban on internet and mobile network has also affected the work of photojournalists in Kashmir. “Sometimes we came back with pictures after a lot of struggle and risks, but couldn’t access internet and send the photos outside due to the ban,” says Dar. “That is very disappointing.”
Photojournalists have also been at the receiving end of public anger in Kashmir since last month. “Since we are first to reach the spot when someone is killed, people are naturally angry at that time and they think of us as some government agency photographers,” he says. “Till they calm down, we are at risk and sometimes the first victims of public anger.”
Last month, while people were bringing out the dead body of a boy killed in Bijbehara from SMHS hospital in Srinagar, AP photojournalist Dar Yasin rushed to the hospital where he was beaten up along with another colleague by the angry people who had assembled outside the hospital. “By the time he was rescued from the crowd and people came to know that he was a photojournalist, his camera was broken in the scuffle,” says Dar, adding that the camera and lens damaged was worth Rs 3 lakh. “In these times, when there is a shutdown and curfew, we can’t get these costly equipments and thus we have to be very careful of our cameras and lenses while covering the protests.”
In that brief period, before the protestors understand their work, Dar says the photojournalists with their costly cameras and equipments are at risk. “There have been instances when photojournalists have been beaten by people and by the time people know what we are doing, our cameras and other equipment worth lakhs are sometimes damaged,” he says, adding that people also understand and cooperate when they understand their work.
"Our photos speak for themselves, they clearly tell who is suffering and who is responsible for that suffering."
These days, Dar says, they are careful of being seen with their cameras in front of angry people and attendants of those injured who are brought to the hospitals. “Whenever we go to the hospital to take pictures of the injured youth, we take our cameras in our bag and talk to the people there first, check their mood and make them understand that we are here to do our job before we take out our cameras to click photos of the injured,” he says. “That way we gain their trust first. We have to tread carefully in these circumstances.”
Since last month, the frequent mobile ban also made it difficult for Dar to reach out to his family in South Kashmir for several days. “I am always worried about my family and my son back home as my village is the epicentre of protests in the south,” he says, adding that there were days when he was unable to get in touch with his family due to the mobile network ban. On some days, he was able to talk to his family through a friend who had walked to his home with his phone that was somehow working. “It was disturbing and difficult to focus on work in Srinagar while being unaware of the welfare of my family back home.”