x

Like our Facebook Page

   
Early Times Newspaper Jammu, Leading Newspaper Jammu
 
Breaking News :   Ancient wisdom continues to guide India | Ensure ‘zero infiltration,’ eliminate Pak terrorists: HM Shah | BSF destroyed 118 Pak posts, 3 terror launch pads along J&K frontier: HM | Amid challenges, CM Omar presents Rs 1,13,767 crore reform‑driven Budget | BUDGET FOR 2026-27 | Revenue Enhancement Measures | Budget at a Glance | Railway Minister signals progress on Jammu Metro | RSS Starts Kashmir to Kanyakumari ‘Dhwaj Yatra’ | Remembering the Nightingale - Lata Mangeshkar’s Legacy Lives On | Bio-fencing with Karonda plant-A low-cost and Eco-friendly practice to protect crops | How to avoid stress, anxiety during board exams | SCERT, Jammu division felicitates selected student for Pariksha Pe Charcha 2026 | Sadhotra hails J&K Budget as balanced, forward-looking, people-centric | LoP Sunil Sharma slams J&K budget as "NC-Centric, Anti-People" | ICC terms Budget progressive, stable; hopeful of robust new industrial policy | PDP chief seeks dedicated Railway Fruit Corridor | Reasi police solve motorcycle theft case; two stolen bikes recovered | Gupta terms budget 2026-27 progressive, people-centric | J&K police distributes school kits among needy students | Drug peddler arrested, huge quantity of banned tablets along with cash Rs 11.60 lakh recovered | Khatana seeks metro connectivity for Jammu and Kashmir | "Union Budget Is a Guarantee Document for Viksit Bharat": Dr Darakhshan Andrabi | SP South Jammu reviews security preparedness with VDGs at Phallian Mandal | Education Department of SPPND GDC Samba participates in live telecast of 9th edition of Pariksha Pe Charcha | A dialogue on media and elections: CEO Punjab with PU students | Sant Samaj lauds Bhagwant Govt for grand arrangements to mark 649th Parkash Purb of Sri Guru Ravidass Maharaj Ji | Hard work & dedication put into exam preparation define a student's true identity: CM Nayab Singh Saini | Finance Minister Harpal Singh Cheema hails success of OTS-2025 as Punjab recovers Rs 110 crore & extends deadline | Sub-zero nights continue, no major snowfall expected in J&K till Feb 16 | Delay vitiates detention: HC quashes PSA order, directs release of detenue | India scales new heights in fertilizer self-reliance: P&K production hits historic 15.76 LMT in January | MSc students of Centre for Molecular Biology, Central University of Jammu qualify JKSET Examination | Vishisht Rail Seva Puraskar and Rail Seva Puraskar function held at Rail Coach Factory, Kapurthala | SJVN's Rampur HPS sets new benchmark with fastest-ever 2000 MU generation | Back Issues  
 
news details
Study challenges long-standing “mass grave” narrative in North Kashmir
‘Over 90% unmarked graves belong to foreign, local terrorists’
9/7/2025 10:45:23 PM
Early Times Report

Srinagar, Sept 7: A new field study has challenged the long-standing “mass grave” narrative in north Kashmir, concluding that more than 90 per cent of the 4,056 unmarked graves investigated belong to foreign and local terrorists.
The report, titled ‘Unraveling the Truth: A Critical Study of Unmarked and Unidentified Graves in Kashmir Valley’, is based on the study conducted by the Kashmir-based NGO Save Youth Save Future Foundation (SYSFF).
Researchers led by Wajahat Farooq Bhat, Zahid Sultan, Irshad Ahmed Bhat, Anika Nazir, Muddasir Ahmed Dar and Shabir Ahmed physically inspected and documented 373 graveyards across the border districts of Baramulla, Kupwara and Bandipora in north Kashmir and Ganderbal in central Kashmir.
“The organisation, which is funded by people, started this project in 2018 and the completed the ground work in 2024. After that, we were preparing the report for submitting to various government offices. The report can stand testimony to counter any narrative that is being dictated from across the border to spread panic in the Kashmir valley,” Wajahat Farooq Bhat said.
Using a rigorous methodology that included GPS tagging, photographic documentation, oral testimonies and an analysis of official records, the study aimed to provide evidence rather than relying on unverified accounts.
The research team documented a total of 4,056 graves, with the data revealing a reality that differs significantly from previous claims made by groups having vested interests, according to the researchers.
As many as 2,493 graves (approximately 61.5 per cent) were identified as belonging to foreign terrorists who were killed in counter-insurgency operations, the report stated.
It noted that these individuals often lacked identification to conceal their networks and maintain Pakistan’s plausible deniability.
Around 1,208 graves (approximately 29.8 per cent) belonged to local militants from Kashmir who were killed in encounters with security forces. Many of these graves were identified through community testimonies and family acknowledgements.
The researchers found only nine confirmed civilian graves, a mere 0.2 per cent of the total.
This finding, according to the SYSFF, directly contradicts the claims of civilian mass graves and suggests that allegations of systematic extrajudicial killings have been “significantly overstated”.
The study also identified 70 graves of tribal invaders who died during the 1947 Kashmir war, highlighting the historical depth of conflict-related burials in the region.
Bhat emphasised the need for comprehensive forensic investigation of the 276 genuinely unmarked graves using modern DNA testing to address humanitarian concerns.
It said the field investigation community engagement formed a crucial component of the research methodology, involving semi-structured interviews with a diverse cross-section of stakeholders. These include local clerics and members of Auqaf mosque committees, gravediggers with decades of experience, families of local militants and disappeared persons, long-term residents with the knowledge of local burial practices and former militants who had surrendered or were released.
This report debunks the claims of certain advocacy groups and international organisations who have portrayed these burial sites as evidence of state-sponsored atrocities.
The SYSFF report argues that its findings reveal such characterisations are largely unsupported by ground evidence.
Wajahat Farooq Bhat called on the international community to demand systematic verification of such claims before making policy decisions.
The study attributes the surge in burials between 1990 and 2000 to the influx of foreign militants following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan, a period that fundamentally altered the nature of the Kashmir conflict.
The group, which mainly comprises scholars studying in various universities, said following the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989, Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence and military establishment redirected their resources and expertise towards Kashmir, viewing it as the next front in their strategic competition with India.
“This shift introduced foreign militants, sophisticated weapons, radical ideologies and external funding that fundamentally altered the character of the Kashmir conflict. Groups like Hizbul Mujahideen, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammad gained prominence during this period, bringing with them agendas that extended far beyond traditional Kashmiri political aspirations,” the researchers said.
It said the influx of foreign militants created unprecedented security challenges for the security forces, who found themselves confronting well-trained, heavily armed infiltrators operating without local identification or family connections.
“The comprehensive field investigation led to the documentation of a total of 4,056 graves across four districts. The data revealed a complex reality that differs substantially from earlier claims and popular narratives surrounding these burial sites,” they said.
Wajahat Farooq Bhat said he and his colleagues have grown up in an environment where mass graves were being projected as a reality.
“For once, we decided to find it by ourselves what the truth is and the findings directly contradict claims of widespread civilian mass graves and suggest that allegations of systematic extrajudicial killings resulting in mass anonymous burials lack empirical foundation,” the group said.
The study also highlights Pakistan’s moral and humanitarian responsibility to acknowledge its citizens among the foreign militants buried in Kashmir and to facilitate family visits to these graves in accordance with international humanitarian norms.
“The systematic denial and abandonment of these individuals by the Pakistani state represents a significant humanitarian failure that has prolonged the suffering of both Kashmiri communities who have borne the burden of caring for these graves and Pakistani families who may never know the fate of their relatives,” the report said.
  Share This News with Your Friends on Social Network  
  Comment on this Story  
 
 
 
Early Times Android App
STOCK UPDATE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
Home About Us Top Stories Local News National News Sports News Opinion Editorial ET Cetra Advertise with Us ET E-paper
 
 
J&K RELATED WEBSITES
J&K Govt. Official website
Jammu Kashmir Tourism
JKTDC
Mata Vaishnodevi Shrine Board
Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board
Shri Shiv Khori Shrine Board
UTILITY
Train Enquiry
IRCTC
Matavaishnodevi
BSNL
Jammu Kashmir Bank
State Bank of India
PUBLIC INTEREST
Passport Department
Income Tax Department
JK CAMPA
JK GAD
IT Education
Web Site Design Services
EDUCATION
Jammu University
Jammu University Results
JKBOSE
Kashmir University
IGNOU Jammu Center
SMVDU