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Days after militant Eisa Razili was shot dead in the Anantnag encounter with the security forces, his classmate Aamir Ahmad Amin wrote a strongly-worded Facebook post against the manipulation that drew the BTech graduate to take the radical route of militancy.
Expressing his anguish over the tragedy, Amin wrote that Eisa was “deeply disturbed” and the fact that people were celebrating his “martyrdom” does not validate the fact that he left his family to wage a “political-socio” battle many termed “jihad”.
Amin traced Fazili’s transition towards hardcore radicalism back to his childhood days when discussions over religion used to incite not just passionate responses from him, but rage. His blood used to boil when the missionary school authorities refused to let students go for Zuhr prayers, added the Amin.
Amin launched a scathing attack on the “Wahhabi preachers, the Tehreeki leaders and the careless relatives” who influenced him and are alive today, but because of whom Eisa had to bear the brunt of jihadism.
Through this post, the youngster vows to make schoolkids aware of their senior’s “irrational” acts to deter them following a similar path.
Even though Fazili didn’t attack any civilian, there is “no justification for religious extremism,” he said.
"As per reliable sources, my son Eisa Fazili has left for the heavenly abode," wrote Naeem Fazili, Hindustan Times reported. When funeral preparations were underway, Naeem wrote:
The slain militant’s father had appealed to his son to return home. He was “playing with fire” by joining militants, Naeem wrote online last year, the Hindustan Times report added.
On 12 March, three militants, including the one who killed a policeman in Srinagar last month, were shot dead in an encounter with security forces in J&K’s Anantnag district. Eisa Fazili, a BTech graduate from Soura Srinagar, was one among the three who died, the report added.
Syed Owais Shafi of south Kashmir’s Kokernag was identified as the second militant, while the identity of the third is being ascertained, a police statement said.
According to Hindustan Times, clashes broke out during Eisa’s funeral where many raised pro-azaadi slogans. Authorities imposed severe restrictions, including the curbing of internet services in the city, the report added.
(With inputs from Hindustan Times)
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