The Systematic Dispossession of Kashmiri Pandit Property

The Systematic Dispossession: Kashmiri Pandit Property Grabbing
Investigative Report

The Systematic Dispossession
of Kashmiri Pandit Property

How revenue fraud, institutional complicity, and the absence of displaced owners turned property theft into paper-legal “transfers” — documented through Crime Branch records, court orders, and satellite evidence.

Based on Crime Branch complaints (2012) • Court records • Satellite imagery • Legislative history
Section I

The Missing Data on a Known Crime

The 1990 exodus of Kashmiri Pandits is well-documented as a demographic catastrophe — over 100,000 families displaced from a homeland where they had lived for millennia. What is far less documented is what happened to the property they left behind. Researchers seeking data on KP property dispossession, distress sales, and land grabbing find an evidentiary vacuum: there is not much. The absence of systematic data is itself a form of erasure.

However, scattered across Crime Branch files, court records, and legislative archives lies a body of evidence that, when pieced together, reveals a comprehensive system of property dispossession — not ad hoc thefts by individual opportunists, but a pattern implicating revenue officials, land brokers, legal machinery, and administrative complicity at every level.

This report draws on one such data source — Crime Branch complaints received from Kashmir Province during the year 2012 — and supplements it with court records from a landmark property restoration case and satellite imagery, to reconstruct the methods, scale, and institutional architecture of Kashmiri Pandit property grabbing.

Section II

Crime Branch Complaints: Kashmir Province, 2012

The Crime Branch of Jammu & Kashmir Police received at least 20 property-related complaints from Kashmir Province in 2012 alone. Each complaint documents a specific instance of property crime — ranging from illegal occupation and encroachment to forged revenue records, fake powers of attorney, temple land theft, and fraud in the migrant relief system.

20
Complaints Filed
9
Illegal Occupation
5
Forged Documents
3
Temple Property
Crime Branch Complaint Register — Kashmir Province, 2012
Crime Branch complaints table 2012
Official Crime Branch register listing property-related complaints received from Kashmir Province during 2012. Source: J&K Crime Branch records.

The complaints can be classified into four distinct categories of property crime, each representing a different mechanism of dispossession:

Classification of Property Crimes by Type (2012 Complaints)

The Complaint Register: Case by Case

Clt. No. Complainant Crime Type Gist Disposal
294/2012Munoo Ji Dhar, ShopianEncroachmentIllegal, unauthorised possession of land measuring 4K shamilatRef to DIG SKR
158/2012Rakesh Koul, BandiporaEncroachmentIllegally occupied the migrant landRef to DC Bandipora
291/2012Bansi Lal Raina, KulgamEncroachmentEncroached residential house/land of the complainantRef to DC Kulgam
320/2012Chandera S. BhatnagarEncroachmentForcibly taken possession of land of the complainantRef to DC Srinagar
441/2012B.L. Pandita familyTemple PropertyConspiracy to sell land without consent, situated at Raghu Nath MandirRef to DC Srinagar
477/2012Payar Lal Bhat, SarwanandFraudRevenue officials fraudulently made entries, impersonating father of complainantRef to DC Ganderbal
503/2012Syed Altaf H. BukhariFraudLand broker cheated — produced forged documents during constructionRef to DIG CKR
570/2012Kuldeep Kumar DharFraudIllegal construction raised on land at New Bus Stand Handwara using illegal documentsInitiated PV
573/2012Yashpal Ram, UriEncroachmentRestoring possession of land taken by one Nazir Ahmad GujjarRef to DC Baramulla
581/2012Aruna Khajuri (woman)FraudExecuted fake power of attorney with regard to land in father’s nameInitiated PV
582/2012Migrant Pandith, ShopianFraudIllegally/fraudulently recorded land in his nameRef to DC Shopian
652/2012Shamboo Nath & Gopi NathEncroachmentEncroached over the land/Purni owned by the applicantsRef to DC Kupwara
653/2012Omkar Nath & BrotherEncroachmentIllegally taken possession/encroachment of landed propertyRef to DC Kupwara
508/2012Dist. Magistrate Srinagar via SSP CBKEncroachmentEncroachment and sale of Migrant property in RainawariRef to local police
892/2012Riyaz Ahmad BhatTemple PropertySold land of different Mandirs at various placesRef to Div Com (K)
433/2012Firdous Ahmad MalikRelief FraudReceiving ration by deceiving authorities, illegal migrant relief from JammuRef to Relief Comm
548/2012Bashir Ahmad ShahRelief FraudPM’s service quota fraud, double drawls in state control boardInitiated PV
671/2012Residents, Pounch GundRelief FraudAcquired huge amount by fraudulent registration as migrant at Relief CommissionerConsigned to records
698/2012Mohd Jamal Waza, KupwaraEncroachmentForcibly grabbed property of complainant by illegal meansRef to SSP Kupwara
427/2012Surinder Ganhar, Temple TrustTemple PropertyTrespassed into temple complex and cut 50 grown willow/poplar treesRef to DC Srinagar
Section III

Patterns of Dispossession

The 20 complaints, though a fraction of the actual incidence, reveal several structural patterns when examined together — patterns that point to a system, not a series of coincidences.

1. Rot From Root to Leaf

The complaints do not describe property crimes committed only by private individuals. Revenue officials are named as co-conspirators in multiple cases — fraudulently making entries in revenue records (case 477/2012), attesting fabricated mutations, and facilitating illegal constructions through forged documents (case 570/2012). The complicity extends from the patwari at the village level to the tehsildar and beyond. The Distress Sales Act has undergone multiple amendments — sometimes favouring the original owner, sometimes the buyer — reflecting the government’s own awareness that the administrative machinery was compromised, and its inability to devise a coherent response.

2. Targeting the Vulnerable

The complaint data reveals a pattern of predatory targeting. Women complainants — including non-KP Hindu women — appear in the records, their property grabbed through mechanisms like fake powers of attorney executed in their fathers’ names (case 581/2012). The perpetrators were not acting randomly; they were selecting victims who were least likely to fight back — women without male advocates, members of tiny minority populations, families displaced hundreds of kilometres away — and most likely to accept a token cash settlement out of helplessness.

Geographic Distribution of Complaints by District

3. Rainawari: If Here, Then Everywhere

Rainawari in Srinagar was one of the densest historical clusters of Kashmiri Pandit habitation in the Valley — a neighbourhood where KPs had lived for centuries and maintained strong community networks. Yet even here, the Crime Branch itself reported encroachment and sale of pandit properties (case 508/2012). If property crimes were this brazen in a neighbourhood where KPs were well-connected and visible, the logical inference for areas where they were few and isolated is devastating. This pattern mirrors the findings from property destruction data: rural districts with no security presence showed far higher rates of destruction than Srinagar.

4. Not a Simple Communal Binary

The data complicates any attempt to reduce this to a simple Muslim-versus-Hindu narrative. In one case (503/2012), the complainant is a local Muslim, Syed Altaf Hussain Bukhari, who was himself cheated by a land broker using forged documents related to KP property. In case 698/2012, a Kashmiri Muslim migrant in Jammu reported the forcible grabbing of his own land in Kupwara — demonstrating that property vulnerability extended to anyone displaced, regardless of community. And in at least one case, KPs filed against other KPs for selling ancestral land without proper authorization — reflecting the desperation and breakdown of trust even within the displaced community.

5. Temple Land as Open Loot

Three complaints specifically concern religious property: conspiracy to sell land at Raghu Nath Mandir (441/2012), sale of land belonging to multiple mandirs across the Valley (892/2012), and trespass and tree-cutting at the Vital Bhairav temple complex in Rainawari (427/2012). KP organizations have long accused mahants of various temple trusts of selling out land and properties in connivance with land sharks and revenue officials. They have demanded CBI probes into these incidents — demands that have gone largely unmet.

6. Parasitic Relief Fraud

A distinct category of crime targeted the migrant relief system itself. People in Kashmir fraudulently registered as migrants to siphon monetary benefits and rations meant for displaced families (cases 433/2012, 548/2012, 671/2012). In one case, a person managed to get his wife appointed under the PM’s service quota by falsely claiming migrant status, while simultaneously drawing benefits from other state boards. This represents a secondary layer of dispossession — not just the theft of property, but the theft of the meagre compensation meant to partially offset that loss.

Ecosystem of Dispossession: Actors Involved
Section IV

Case Study: Vaital Bhairavi Temple, Rainawari

The case of the Vital Bhairav Temple in Rainawari (complaint 427/2012) offers a microcosm of how property crime, media distortion, and institutional apathy compound to produce erasure. The Crime Branch complaint, filed by Surinder Ganhar — president of the Sh Vital Bhairav Sewa Sabha and Kala Mandir — records that the accused, Abdul Rashid Durani S/O Ab Khalid of Drangbal Pampore, trespassed into the temple complex and cut down 50 grown willow and poplar trees without any permission.

What the Media Reported

When the matter reached the media — after a Kashmiri Pandit, Lalit Ambardar, raised it on Twitter prompting Chief Minister Omar Abdullah to direct the Deputy Commissioner to visit the site — the reporting sanitized the incident. The news story from March 28, 2012 stated that tree felling had been “stopped” and that “one tree was cut and has been handed over to the trust.”

More significantly, the article reframed the issue: instead of focusing on the named accused and the crime documented by the Crime Branch, it shifted to a generalized claim that “Kashmiri Pandit organisations have been accusing mahants of various temple trusts in the Valley of selling out land and properties of these religious places in connivance with land sharks and some revenue officials.” The onus was placed on the victim community to blame itself.

News Report — March 28, 2012
News report about temple tree cutting
Media report claiming “one tree was cut” — contradicting the Crime Branch complaint of 50 trees felled and the satellite evidence below.

What the Satellites Show

Google Maps satellite imagery from two time periods settles the factual question definitively. The 2011 image shows the Vital Bhairav Temple compound with clear green canopy cover — the poplar and willow trees documented in the Crime Branch complaint. The August 2012 image — taken just months after the March 2012 complaint — shows the tree cover visibly stripped from the temple grounds.

Satellite image 2011 showing trees
2011 — Tree Cover Intact
Satellite image 2012 showing trees removed
August 2012 — Trees Stripped

Three layers of evidence, one conclusion: The Crime Branch complaint records 50 trees cut. The satellite imagery confirms large-scale tree removal. The media reported “one tree.” The gap between the official record, physical evidence, and public narrative is itself the mechanism of erasure.

Section V

Case Study: Munoo Ji Dhar — Anatomy of a Land Grab

While the Crime Branch data reveals the scale and variety of property crimes, the case of Munoo Ji Dhar of Shopian (complaint 294/2012) exposes the precise modus operandi — the step-by-step mechanism by which KP land was legally stolen. Munoo Ji Dhar was able to reclaim his land through the courts in 2014, and the court order reads as a forensic autopsy of institutional fraud.

The Facts

The land in question belonged to Janki Nath and others, and was in the personal cultivation of Balji — Munoo Ji Dhar’s father and a shareholder. Through two fraudulent mutations entered into the revenue records, ownership was transferred to Gh. Mohi-Ud-Din S/O Shaban Wani — the accused in the Crime Branch complaint.

Court Order — Para 1: Original Ownership & Fraudulent Mutations
Court order paragraph 1
The court records how two mutations — No. 148 (1985) and No. 151 (1991) — were used to transfer ownership from the original KP owners to the encroacher.

The Modus Operandi

Pre-Exodus Legal Foothold (March 1985)

Mutation No. 148, dated 11.03.1985, was attested under Section 4 of the Agrarian Reforms Act, 1976, declaring the accused as “Prospective Owner” of land that belonged to Janki Nath’s family and was cultivated by Balji. This created a paper foothold — a claim that could later be converted into ownership.

Post-Exodus Ownership Transfer (August 1991)

Mutation No. 151, dated 31.08.1991 — barely eighteen months after the mass exodus of January 1990 — converted the “prospective ownership” into full ownership rights. The timing was precise: the actual owners had fled, were living in refugee camps in Jammu, and were in no position to know about, let alone contest, the mutation.

Fabricated Revenue Records

The court found forensic evidence of fraud in the revenue records themselves. Both mutations were marked as “Juzvi” (parts of each other) in Column 1, meaning they should be continuous. But if they were genuinely issued six years apart (1985 and 1991), there should have been numerous other mutation sheets filed in between. Instead, they sat back-to-back — proving they were fabricated and inserted into the register together.

Forged Signatures of a Minor

When challenged, the accused claimed that Munoo Ji Dhar himself had signed the mutation sheet consenting to the transfer. The court found this claim to be “a nullity” — because in 1985, Munoo Ji Dhar was a minor, a child. The signature was either forged entirely or extracted from a child with no legal standing to consent to a property transfer.

No Hearing for Original Owners

The court noted that no opportunity of hearing was provided to the original owners — a mandatory procedural requirement. Even the attesting officer’s own order admitted there was no entry of prospective owners in the revenue record and that the original owners had actual possession on the spot — the officer’s own records contradicted the mutations he had attested.

Court Order — Forensic Analysis of Mutation Records
Court order on mutation fraud
The court identifies that both mutations are continuous parts of each other despite being dated six years apart — evidence they were fabricated and inserted together. “Arouses suspicion of malafide action.”
Court Order — Forged Signatures & Procedural Violations
Court order on forged signatures
No hearing for original owners. The accused claimed appellant’s signatures on the mutation sheet — but in 1985, the appellant was a minor. The court declares this “a nullity.”

The Verdict

The court allowed the appeals and set aside both fraudulent mutations. The matter was remanded to the District Magistrate, Anantnag, for a de novo enquiry under the Jammu and Kashmir Migrants Immovable Property (Preservation, Protection and Restraint on Distress Sales) Act, 1997, with directions for compensation and further legal action. A cost of Rs. 10,000 was imposed on the accused for “undue harassment and unnecessary litigation.”

Court Order — Final Verdict
Court order final verdict
Both mutations set aside. Matter remanded for de novo enquiry under the Distress Sales Act, 1997. Rs. 10,000 cost imposed on the accused.

The arithmetic of injustice: It took Munoo Ji Dhar 21 years to approach the authorities and another 2 years to get justice — for a crime committed in 1991 exploiting his family’s displacement. He is a rare success story. The structural conditions of exile — physical distance, no access to local courts, no presence to detect the crime — made it functionally impossible for most displaced KPs to fight. The system guaranteed that the dispossessed could not fight back. What was recorded as “sale” or “transfer” was, in reality, theft laundered through bureaucratic paper.

Section VI

The Legislative Failure: Distress Sales Act and Its Amendments

It was precisely this pattern of dispossession — documented in Crime Branch records, exposed in court orders, visible from satellite imagery — that led to the enactment of the J&K Migrants Immovable Property (Preservation, Protection and Restraint on Distress Sales) Act, 1997. The Act was designed to preserve and protect migrant property and restrain distress sales.

But the Act’s own legislative history tells the story of its failure. It has undergone multiple amendments — sometimes tilting in favour of the original displaced owner, sometimes accommodating the interests of the buyer. This see-saw approach reflects a government that could never commit to a clear position: either the properties were stolen and should be restored, or the transfers were legitimate and should be recognized. Each amendment was an implicit admission that the previous version had failed, and each new version introduced its own contradictions.

The result was a framework that neither protected migrant property effectively nor provided closure. The incentive structure for land grabbing remained essentially intact: the penalties were token (Rs. 10,000 in the Munoo Ji Dhar case, for a fraud spanning decades), the process required the displaced victim to fight from exile for years, and the revenue machinery that had facilitated the original crimes was tasked with investigating them.

Periodic government announcements about voiding all such deals have remained, in practice, rhetorical. The property portal launched to register and retrieve KP properties, while a step forward in documentation, cannot undo decades of dispossession without the political will to act on what the data reveals.

The core paradox: The same administrative machinery that facilitated property grabbing — the patwari system, the revenue department, the tehsildars — was entrusted with protecting migrant property and investigating violations. The fox was asked to guard the henhouse, and the legislative record shows exactly what happened.

Section VII

Conclusion: The Architecture of Erasure

The 20 Crime Branch complaints from 2012 are a sample, not a census. They represent only those cases where a displaced person — living hundreds of kilometres away in a refugee camp or cramped tenement — somehow learned that their property had been seized, somehow found the means to file a complaint with the Crime Branch, and somehow believed the system might act. For every complaint filed, the number of undetected, unreported, and uncontested property thefts can only be imagined.

What the data reveals is not a series of individual crimes but an architecture of erasure — a system in which every component worked, intentionally or through neglect, to convert displacement into permanent dispossession:

The Exodus Created the Opportunity

The mass displacement of 1990 left properties unguarded, owners absent, and an entire community unable to monitor, contest, or defend their land rights.

The Revenue Machinery Executed the Theft

Patwaris, tehsildars, and revenue officials — through fabricated mutations, forged signatures, fraudulent entries, and procedural violations — created the paper trail that converted physical occupation into legal ownership.

The Legal System Made Justice Impossible

Displaced owners faced an impossible burden: detecting the crime from exile, funding litigation in a distant and hostile jurisdiction, and fighting cases that took decades to resolve — with token penalties even when they won.

The Media Cushioned the Perpetrators

When cases did surface, media reporting minimized the scale, shifted blame to the victim community, and reframed systematic theft as isolated disputes or internal community problems.

The Legislature Performed Concern Without Delivering Justice

The Distress Sales Act and its amendments created an appearance of protection without the institutional will to enforce it — a legislative performance that substituted for actual restitution.

What was done to Kashmiri Pandit property was not collateral damage of conflict. It was a systematic, multi-layered process of dispossession — executed through the instruments of the state itself, protected by the absence of accountability, and obscured by the absence of data. The Crime Branch complaints of 2012, the court records of the Munoo Ji Dhar case, and the satellite images of the Vital Bhairav temple are fragments of a larger evidentiary picture that demands — and has not yet received — a comprehensive, honest accounting.

A final question: If the data shown here represents what was documented from a single year of Crime Branch complaints — from cases where victims somehow managed to file — what does the full, undocumented picture look like across three decades of displacement?

Sources: J&K Crime Branch Complaint Register (2012) • Court Order in the matter of Munoo Ji Dhar v. Gh. Mohi-Ud-Din (Anantnag) • Google Maps Satellite Imagery (2011, 2012) • News reports (March 2012) • J&K Migrants Immovable Property Act, 1997

Report compiled from the SearchKashmir Twitter thread • Data analysis and documentation by SearchKashmir

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