1998 Wandhama massacre


The 1998 Wandhama Ganderbal massacre refers to the killings of 23 Kashmiri Hindus in the town of Wandhama in Jammu and Kashmir on 25 January 1998. The victims included four children, nine women and 10 men. The Lashkar-e-Taiba was blamed for perpetrating the massacre.

Background

Wandhama is a small town near Ganderbal in the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir in India. The state had a large minority population of Hindu Kashmiri Hindus, over a half of a million of whom fled from the Kashmir valley to the Hindu-majority Jammu part of the state after militants began carrying out a systematic campaign of assassinations and intimidation against them.

The Massacre

On 25 January 1998, 23 Kashmiri Hindus living in the village of Wandhama were killed by unidentified gunmen. According to the testimony of one of the survivors of the incident, a 14-year-old Hindu boy named Vinod Kuman Dhar, the gunmen came to their house dressed like Indian Army soldiers, had tea with them, waiting for a radio message indicating that all Hindu families in the village had been covered. After a brief conversation they rounded up all the members of the Hindu households and then summarily gunned them down with Kalashnikov rifles. The massacre was allegedly committed by Abdul Hamid Gada of the Hizbul Mujahideen and was timed to coincide with the Shab-e-Qadar, the holiest night of the month of Ramzan, when believers stay awake until dawn. Gada was subsequently shot dead by Indian security forces in 2000. After the massacre.

Reactions

The day after the incident, agitating Kashmiri Hindus clashed with police in the Capital, New Delhi, when they broke barricades and tried to force their way to the National Human Rights Commission. At least 11 Kashmiri Hindus were injured when they were hit by water cannon.
Indian Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral joined the mourners in Kashmir's Wandhama village on 28 January. The Prime Minister was accompanied by Governor General K V Krishna Rao, Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah and Union Minister for Environment Saifuddin Soz. He said:
There were protests in several refugee camps where Kashmiri Hindus have been interred since their ethnic cleansing.