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February 8, 2019 12:38 pm

Footballers Defy Kashmir Conflict To Take Indian League By Storm

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SRINAGAR – Bullets are heard every day in the world’s most mili­tarised zone, but shots fired on goal by Danish Farooq have become a revela­tion in Kashmir.

The 22-year-old striker symbolises a fairytale rise by Real Kashmir, the first club from the war-torn Himalayan region to make it into India’s top football league.

With the help of Scottish coach David Robert­son, the Snow Leopards have emerged as serious title con­tenders in their debut I-League season and on Wednesday beat Gokulam Kerala 1-0 to go top of the table. Farooq has defied stone-pelting protesters and pel­lets shot by security forces to make it to training.

“I have struggled a lot. But whatever the situation, I try not to miss practice,” said Farooq, whose father was also a pro­fessional footballer, playing for Mohammedan Sporting, one of India’s oldest clubs.

“Playing in the I-League is a dream come true and I am living that dream every day.”

Other players are also wary of the security situation and would rather join clubs outside of Indi­an-administered Kashmir, which is also claimed by neighbour­ing Pakistan and where tens of thousands have died in conflict since the 1990s. There are some 500,000 Indian soldiers and po­lice in the region to combat reb­els battling for independence or a merger with Pakistan.

The insurgency has soured re­lations between the two coun­tries for decades, while else­where in India Kashmiris are viewed with suspicion.

“If you are a Kashmiri, even if you are a sportsperson, you are labelled a terrorist,” said mid­fielder Khalid Qayoom.

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“We want to change that per­ception. Kashmiris are not terror­ists, it is just a label thrust on us.”

But there were stark remind­ers of the troubles outside the stadium — which is covered with snow for much of the football sea­son — after his team’s 1-0 home win over Chennai City last week. Armed police and armoured ve­hicles patrolled the perimeter as 15,000 rapturous fans cheered the hometown heroes.

– ‘A joke’ –

Real Kashmir have come a long way since newspaper editor Shamim Meraj and businessman Sandeep Chattoo raised funds to buy 500 footballs to keep lo­cal youths occupied after deadly floods in 2014. The club took for­mal shape in March 2016, four months before a civilian upris­ing triggered by the killing of popular 21-year-old rebel leader Burhan Wani. Chattoo said Real Kashmir started as “a joke”.

“We just threw out the idea and went step-by-step. I had no idea how far it would go,” he said. The pair brought on as coach Scotland’s David Rob­ertson, a former Aberdeen and Rangers defender, while Adidas agreed to a kit sponsorship — the only Indian team to get the sportswear giant’s money.

“We found our calling when we got to know… how the team has set on a mission to bring a positive change in the valley,” said Adidas marketing chief Sha­rad Singla. Robertson declined coaching offers from clubs in Chi­na and Uganda to take charge at the Snow Leopards but had never visited India before and consid­ered abandoning the club after just two days in Kashmir, after a power and internet outage cut him off from family back home.

“I was ready to go. But then the club owner persuaded me to stay, and now I am so glad that he did that,” he said.

“Overall for me the pleasing thing is that the success of the team has put Kashmir on the football map.” Robertson even convinced his son Mason to quit a full-time contract with Scottish side Peterhead to join the team as a midfielder. Local under-15 coach Owais Farooq said Real Kashmir’s sudden triumphs had brought about a surge of interest in the sport among Kashmir’s young­sters. “I receive so many calls ev­ery day from parents who want to enrol their children in training programmes but we don’t have enough grounds to train,” he said.

– Turf war –

Football is an afterthought in cricket-mad India, and the coun­try’s 103rd-ranked international side is a notorious underachiever which has never participated in a World Cup. The sport was popular in Kashmir before an armed rebellion against Indian rule erupted in the 1990s, after which no tournament was held for almost two decades. But Real Kashmir have given locals a fresh taste for football success.

“You can see the love that the people have given us,” said club co-owner Meraj. “That’s the big­gest takeaway for us.”

Thirty-five-year-old hotel worker Parvaiz Ahmad Reshi said he only started watching football on TV because of the club.

“I have been hooked on it ever since,” he said. “When I watch the game I forget my troubles. It’s so good to have something apart from violence and killings to talk about.”

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