Unknown gunmen fired at the editor and his two personal security officers outside the newspaper building at 7 pm on June 14 when he stepped out of his office and boarded his vehicle to head for home amid the holy Eid month. Shujaat and two of his PSOs, Hamid Chaudhary and Mumtaz Awan, received multiple injuries in the firing. Shujaat and Hamid died on the spot, while Mumtaz succumbed to injuries in a hospital later.
Shujaat was known for his pro-Kashmir views and was a great believer in India-Pakistan rapprochement, thus a spokesperson for a peaceful resolution to the vexed Kashmir issue. He would never shy away from expressing his opinion about matters irrespective of their complications and far-reaching ramifications, thus often got trolled within the Valley and outside of it by opponents who had ideological differences as well as personal dislike with the man.
When a leading social activist alleged that his newspaper had received “funding from agencies” and was playing to the “ISI script” by “spitting venom against India”, a painted Shujaat sought criminal proceedings for defamation. Of late, a hate article in a little-known portal portrayed Shujaat as someone who was “betraying Kashmir struggle” and is “a close aide of Indian agencies”, he felt all the more indignant. Indeed, way back in 2006, Shujaat had told Reporters Without Borders: “It is virtually impossible to know who are our enemies and who are our friends.”
Typically, though, Shujaat used to take every criticism positively, however bitter it was when expressed on social media. He would, without losing much of his cool, also respond to the flak. Yet, a few days ago, an exasperated Shujaat took to Facebook, saying he was planning to leave social media for good sooner than later. It was a platform he was otherwise so fond of, having been regularly posting links of reports, columns and edits of his paper, besides pictures of his visits to different places. Recently, Shujaat’s FB wall carried a slew of his pictures in Lisbon, where he had gone to attend a Global Editors Conference.
After leaving The Hindu, which he served as the J&K bureau chief for 15 years till 2012, Shujaat founded Rising Kashmir. The English paper later he came up with Urdu daily Buland Kashmir and a Kashmir counterpart called Sangarmal, which are run by Kashmir Media House that Shujaat owned. He was also president of Adbi Markaz Kamraz, which is a Kashmiri literary organisation that promotes the state’s language and poetry. In fact, Shujaat was instrumental in convincing the government to make a study of Kashmiri language as compulsory in the school education to popularise one of the ancient country’s oldest languages.