The Meadow
(Adrian Levy & Cathy Scott Clark)
(Penguin
Books)
There are some books which keep you awake even as the
clock strikes 2 a.m. and you just cannot let go as the novel takes alarming
twists and turns and you compulsively turn the pages, your eyes sprinting over
the words since the characters are out to save the world from the bad guys.
However, this is true about non-fiction only very rarely, which though
interesting, are not spell binding. The Meadow, by Adrian Levy
and Cathy Scott-Clark, thankfully is a glowing exception to this rule.
The thick novel (500+ pages) is a moving tale of five
kidnapped tourists in the troubled state of Jammu and Kashmir, two decades back,
and is a spine chilling account of how that place became the target of sinister
designs of terror groups in Pakistan and how Indian security forces turned the
paradise into wanton killing fields.
The books starts off by painting the lifestyle and
background of all the people involved in the evolving tragedy in the summer of
1995:
Don Hutchings and his wife Jane Schelly from Spokane,
USA;
Keith Mangan and his wife Juliet from Middlesborough,
England;
Paul Wells and his girl friend Catherine Moseley from
Blackburn, England;
Dirk Hasert and his girl friend Anne Hennig from
Germany;
John Childs, the engineer from Connecticut, USA who
managed to escape;
Hans Christian OstrØ
from Oslo, Norway, the ebullient Indophile who was brutally beheaded by his
captors.
The book has a difficult
task at hand. The amount of research that has gone into writing it is monumental.
All the parties to this sordid crime would try to distance themselves from it;
some were killed in the meantime, some still in harness in sensitive
governmental posts, others under threat. It meanders through the labyrinthine
structure of the Indian security forces with internecine animosity between the
various branches of the apparatus: the army, the secret service, the various
intelligence services as also the state police.
The tale unravels in the
dusty villages of Pakistan, from where its many terrorist organizations pick up
their cadre, typically driven by hunger and untold sufferings. With the Soviets
in full retreat from Afghanistan, the mujahideen had become unemployed
and irrelevant. The terror set up in the AfPak border had to come up with some
new area of interest to keep their cadre reined in. Kashmir was the obvious
choice with local militancy rearing its head due to New Delhi’s alleged rigging
the 1987 state elections. Supported overtly by the ISI and tacitly by the
military establishment, it took little time for the establishment at Binori
Town, Lahore to cobble together a team to launch an offensive against
unsuspecting and non military targets in Indian Kashmir.
In such a scenario,
heavily armed terrorists, having been brainwashed in the madrassas of
Pakistan crossed over the LOC, and in
early July of 1987 kidnapped half a dozen foreigners who had landed in Kashmir
for trekking and sight seeing but were lulled into a false sense of security by
the tourist police and other tourism
officials. What unfolded over the next six months is a bone chilling account of
killings and counter killings and finally you reach a stage in the
investigation where you have lost your bearings. Unbelievable and totally mind
boggling skeletons start tumbling out from the cupboard of almost every party
to the abduction except the victims.
The story telling is
lucid, fast paced and at places intensely emotional where the helplessness of
the families of the victims is portrayed. This book is a starting point for
every person who wants to understand the realpolitik and the distorted truths
of a place once called “Gar firdaus bar-rue
zamin ast, hami asto, hamin asto, hamin ast.”(If there is a heaven on earth,
it’s here, it’s here).
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