Kashmiri leader Khalida Shah believes India is trying to erase Kashmir's history

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Kashmiri leader Khalida Shah. Photo: Al Jazeera

Kashmiri leader Sheikh Muhammad Abdullah daughter Khalida Shah believes that the Indian government is trying to erase the history of Kashmir.

In an interview with Qatar based media house Al Jazeera, Abdullah’s daughter hit out at the Indian government for stripping the occupied territory of autonomy on August 5 and dismantling Sheikh Abdullah's birthday as a state holiday in the valley.

"It is definitely hurtful," Shah, told Al Jazeera at her home in Srinagar, where she has been under house arrest since August last year.

"Indian government is trying to erase the history of Kashmir by doing this," she said referring to the removal of Abdullah's anniversary celebration by India's governing Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

On August 5 last year, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi abrogated Articles 370 and 35A of the Indian constitution. Article 370 allowed Kashmir to have its own flag, a separate constitution and the freedom to make laws.

Also read: Pakistan observes Kashmir Solidarity Day

Kashmiris also fear that after the revocation of the region’s special status India will aim for a demographic change in the Muslim-majority region.

Angry at India's recent actions in Kashmir, Shah said her family "became enemies with people for siding with India". Three generations of the Abdullah family ruled the region for most of the last seven decades.

Her father’s rose to prominence in 1931 when he led Kashmiri resistance against the Dogra family ruling the region.

Experts told Al Jazeera that New Delhi was working to impose their version of history in Kashmir.

The Indian government has declared October 26 as Accession Day to commemorate the signing of the Instrument accession by its ruler Hari Singh in 1947.

"Hindu right-wing in India lays territorial claims on Kashmir by systematically erasing historical experiences of Kashmiri people," Muhammad Junaid, a Kashmiri academic based in the US, told Al Jazeera.

Also read: Nation celebrates Independence Day as 'Kashmir Solidarity Day'

"They want to deny the existence of long history of Kashmiri struggle against the Hindu Dogra feudal state as well as [for] freedom from Indian control," he said.

He also said the events that reaffirm the existence of Kashmiris and their struggles for emancipation are seen as "affronts to Hindu nationalism" by New Delhi.

"They want to forcibly suppress people's memories, especially those that hold the centre of Kashmiri identity and impose their own version," Junaid said. 

However, a BJP spokesman Ashok Koul maintains that "these steps won't harm anyone".

"History should be put in the right perspective for the new generations. The government knows what are the right things for this society," he said referring to the abrogation of Article 370.