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Blood in the snow
It is a short walk to the bus stop from the Lal Ded Memorial hospital in Srinagar. At 1525 hours on a cold Friday, Rubaiya Sayeed, a 23-year-old intern, stepped out on to the Iqbal Park road, turned right, and walked to the intersection ahead. Rubaiya was on her way home to Nowgam. Boarding a local mini-bus, she settled down to what she thought was another routine ride.
At Ram Bagh two men got in. Except for a passenger, it was doubtful whether anyone read anything sinister in that. Certainly Rubaiya did not.
The nightmare began at Bagat Kanipora. Three strangers suddenly materialised beside Rubaiya with guns. They forced her out of the bus into a waiting blue Maruti.
The hour was 1545. It signalled the beginning of a 122-hour drama.
Rubaiya's abduction was spurred by her father Mufti Mohammad Sayeed's appointment as independent India's first Muslim Union home minister. He had taken the oath in Delhi on December 2, 1989, just six days before.
Sayeed, who was in Delhi then, came to know of the abduction two hours later. The Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front, a pro-independence militant outfit, claimed credit for it through telephone calls. Their ransom: the release of five jailed colleagues.
The Vishwanath Pratap Singh government -- then in power only for six days -- hurriedly constituted a Cabinet subcommittee comprising ministers Arun Nehru, Arif Mohammad Khan and Inder Kumar Gujral. In Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir Chief Secretary Moosa Raza formed a special cell to tackle the crisis.
The next day saw frantic attempts to establish contact with the militants. On December 10, they reiterated their demand: release the militants by 1900 hours on Monday or "Rubaiya's body will be thrown within Srinagar city."
Negotiations began in earnest with Justice M L Bhat of the Allahabad high court as intermediary. The first deadline came and went; talks continued. Meanwhile, four of the five militants whose release was demanded were brought to Srinagar.
Chief Minister Dr Farooq Abdullah, fresh-returned from an abandoned foreign tour, was dead against giving in. But the Centre had more or less decided to free the militants.
December 13 saw Gujral and Arif Mohammad Khan landing in Srinagar with the prime minister's orders to release Abdul Hamid Sheikh, Sher Khan, Noor Mohammad Kalwal, Altaf Ahemed and Javed Ahemed Jargar. On Wednesday afternoon at 1505 hours, they were released in Rajouri Kadal in downtown Srinagar.
Zafar Meeraj, a prominent journalist in the valley, received a telephone call an hour later. "We have got our boys," the JKLF spokesman told him in Urdu, "The girl will be with her parents soon."
Another hour and Rubaiya was back with her family. "I had left her fate in the hands of the Almighty," said an overjoyed Sayeed, "She got a fresh lease of life."
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