Amidst Increasing Crackdown, Rohingya Refugees in Jammu caught between arbitrary detentions and fears of deportation

Myanmar India

Navigating an existential crisis, refugees continue their desperate effort to assert their status as asylum seekers, not illegal migrants.

 By Basharat Amin

The narrow and shrunken lane of Mecca Masjid Chowk (Mecca mosque square) in Jammu bustled with the usual chaos – shouts of vendors, the chatter of customers. Gouramya, a 40-year-old Rohingya Muslim refugee, stood at his modest vegetable stall negotiating over a bunch of spinach with a customer when a police party suddenly approached him.

“It was around 3.00 PM on May 1, 2025, when the police came suddenly and told me to come with them. I didn’t understand what was happening, but I was made to sit in their vehicle. Within minutes, we were on the way to Trikuta Nagar, Jammu,” Gouramya recalls.

At the police post, he was detained without clear charges or explanation. He was not alone. Eight other members of his Rohingya community were also picked up from different localities that day.

“I was thinking about my wife and children”, he says. “Who would care for them if something happened to me?”

Outside, his family was gripped by panic. His wife and four children visited the police post daily, hoping for a glimpse or a word. But they were turned away at the gate, denied any access.

After three days, Gouramya was finally released on bail along with eight other members of the same community, after some community members approached the Magistrate’s office. But the fear lingers like a shadow. “It is a haunting memory,” the voice heavy with emotions.

“My family members were terrified for my safety, because hundreds of us have been detained in the past, and many are still being held in Hiranagar Jail in Kathua district of Jammu and Kashmir,” he says.

©Kashmir Times

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