People offer funeral prayers for Constable Rameez Ahmad Baba, who according to Indian police succumbed to his injuries after he was on a bus that was attacked by militants in the Ganderbal district of Indian-administered Kashmir the previous day. At least 11 people were reported injured, and three killed in the attack.
2022 Photo Contest, Asia, Honorable Mention

Endless War

Photographer

Dar Yasin

The Associated Press
14 December, 2021

People offer funeral prayers for Constable Rameez Ahmad Baba, who according to Indian police succumbed to his injuries after he was on a bus that was attacked by militants in the Ganderbal district of Indian-administered Kashmir the previous day. At least 11 people were reported injured, and three killed in the attack.

This project documents ongoing unrest in the long-disputed region of Kashmir, dating back to 1947, when India and Pakistan gained independence from Britain. Both nations claim Kashmir in its entirety, and each administers a portion of the region. In Indian-administered Kashmir, rebels have been fighting Indian rule for decades, seeking to unite the territory, either under Pakistani rule or as an independent country. India says that Pakistan supports armed insurgency in Kashmir. Pakistan denies the charge, saying it provides moral and diplomatic support only. 

In August 2019, after rising tensions and clashes both between India and Pakistan, and with separatists inside the territory, India removed the special status it had granted Indian-administered Kashmir, annulled its separate constitution, and split the region into two federal territories. Protests and clashes have continued since then, with India at times  suspending 4G internet access and barring access to social media in the region. A ban on religious processions during the Muslim holy month of Muharram (which in 2021 took place in August and September) led to clashes between civilians and police. Kashmiri Muslims have long complained that the government is curbing their religious freedom on the pretext of maintaining law and order. Hundreds of Muslims took to the streets in Srinagar, the region’s largest city, chanting religious and pro-freedom slogans, meeting with a severe police response.

The photographer, a Kashmiri photojournalist, feels a heavy responsibility to bear witness to what is happening to his homeland.

Dar Yasin
About the photographer

Dar Yasin is a photojournalist born and based in Kashmir, India. Throughout his career, Yasin has extensively covered the Kashmir conflict–for which he was awarded a Pulitzer prize–as well as the Afghan War and the Rohingya refugee crisis. Yasin has won dozens of international and national photo award...

Read the full biography
Technical information
Shutter Speed

1/3200

ISO

500

Camera

Canon EOS-1DX

Jury comment

The jury awarded this honorable mention as a way to recognize the photographer, who took a major risk and demonstrated bravery and commitment by covering the exacerbation of a historically contentious topic in the wake of COVID-19. By photographing the events which unfolded following forced lockdowns and a monumental constitutional amendment, the local Kashmiri photographer has contributed an inside perspective to a historical record which has been completely censored in the region.