Srinagar, May12: Tanveer Ul Ahad (31), editor of Global News Service (GNS), passed away on Monday evening in a Srinagar hospital after he was undertaken by a breif illness.
According to his family and colleagues, Tanvir passed away at SMHS hospital following the rupture in his appendix.
Besides, GNS,Tanveer was the owner of daily Kashmir Glory.
The news of his untimely death at such a young age has shocked the entire media faternity, including The Kashmir Press. While discharging his professional duties, Tanvir remained committed to facts till he breathed his last. Along with media faternity, The Kashmir Press extends its heartfelt condolences with the family and his colleagues at GNS and Kashmir glory.
Following his death, the GNS paid tributes to deceased editor in a letter published here:
Tanveer-ul-Ahad: Immensely Talented But Unfairly Brief
‘I’m Going to Die, Sir Ensure Continuity Of GNS’
Tanveer-ul-Ahad, Editor-in-Chief of Global News Service and Daily Kashmir Glory newspaper, was not only a colleague but also a dear friend to me and several other people. Always on the lookout for stories, he would often go the extra mile to help those in need.
Tanveer, or Tanu as friends would call him, had a knack for digging extraordinary details from even the most shrewd officials. Working under the most trying circumstances, he would often break exclusive stories. As I recall, in 2017, he worked for several weeks on a story that eventually led to the arrest of a Handwara resident in Maharashtra, who had been impersonating as an Army doctor and a NASA scientist, and had abandoned five women after marrying them besides extorting money from people. A senior police officer was so impressed by his reporting skills that he jokingly asked him to join the police as an investigation officer.
There are several other such stories Tanveer broke but never got the credit for since he never gave much importance to bylines. Tanveer was instrumental in turning GNS into Jammu and Kashmir’s leading news agency with bare minimum resources at his disposal.
He was never afraid to ask hard questions or hold anyone to account. He did his job with dedication and passion.
On Saturday evening, he called me to inform that he had been vomiting continuously.
Hours later, I called on his number only to be informed by his brother that he had been shifted to Handwara hospital from his home in Muqam Shahwali, a Red Zone area with one of its neighborhoods Anderhama being most affected by the coronavirus in north Kashmir’s Kupwara district.
He was referred to SMHS hospital as doctors shy from attending patients from Red Zone for personal safety. Ironically, at SMHS hospital he was kept waiting by doctors even as some IV fluids were administrated to him initially.
Around 6 a.m. on Monday, his father called on my number and I could hear Tanveer’s screams. “Sir they kept the belt around my arm intact while administering IV fluids. My arm is bruised and swelled.
Sir I may not going to survive but please ensure continuity of GNS and Daily Kashmir Glory.
I tried to console him but the call dropped. His samples for covid-19 were taken and returned by 4:30 p.m. on Monday but then too much time was lost and life-support mechanism proved inadequate.
He eventually breathed his last late in the night. His loss as human being is colossal and irreparable by every stretch of imagination. Mr Tanveer was born in Muqam Shahwali and spent his childhood there before arriving in Srinagar for a job. After stints with Alsafa, one of the leading bilingual daily of the times, and PBI, a prominent news agency of the time, Tanveer found Daily Kashmir Glory and later GNS.
People in the fraternity would vouch for the correctness of information in GNS stories. We will try to maintain the sacredness of facts and unbiased news and try to live up to the last wish of Tanveer.
The task at the hand is not easy but we are hopeful that with your support and blessings we will sail through these difficult times.
Regards
Editor
GNS