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July
17, 2001
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Let’s
go back to the future in Kashmir
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Long
haul to peace
PERVEZ
MUSHARRAF can pat himself on the back because he has retrieved Kashmir
from the backburner. He can also take credit for refocusing the
international community’s attention on the problem which, in his
own words, is ‘‘simmering disconcertingly’’. In the process he has
got global prominence he would not have had as a military ruler.
In his own country, he is getting recognition as democracy to most
Pakistanis is only a means to an end. And the end is India’s acceptance
of Pakistan’s prowess and viability.
This
consideration may have weighed with President Musharraf when he
changed his nation’s agenda from what type of government it should
have to how high it was status-wise, vis-a-vis India. Fifty years
of distance and discord with India have made the Pakistanis accept
anything but a lesser stature, definitely not New Delhi’s impetuosity.
Kashmir has come to epitomise Pakistan’s stern attitude towards
India, at least among the Punjabis who are in a majority in Pakistan.
When
it is reported that the talks at the Agra summit have been ‘‘positive
and constructive’’, it means that Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee
has been trying to find a way to assure Musharraf that Pakistan’s
sensitivity on Kashmir can be accommodated within a framework which
New Delhi will build to give maximum autonomy to the state. Musharraf
on his part has been making sure that India’s fears on cross-border
terrorism will be set right. A mechanism of sorts for further dialogue
and possible adjustments seems to be taking shape. This is confirmed
by Vajpayee’s acceptance of the invitation to visit Islamabad. So
the dialogue continues and Kashmir and cross-border terrorism remain
on the agenda.
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Were
New Delhi to give Pakistan the Valley or accept it as an independent
state, it would do so on the basis of the population’s complexion
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It
was not surprising to find Musharraf making his first statement
on Indian soil on Kashmir during his meeting with intellectuals
in Delhi on the eve of the summit. He said the Line of Control was
not acceptable and if any Pakistani leader agreed to it, he could
not return to his country. One could visualise a favourable response
to his statement in Pakistan, particularly from the fundamentalist
groups that have been wedded to politics since Zia-ul Haq’s days.
But Musharraf should have also realised that no government in India
could stay in office if it agreed to change the LoC in any substantial
way. Indeed, such solutions are harder to sell by a democratically
leader than a military one not dependent on voters.
Had
Jammu and Kashmir gone to Pakistan at the time of Partition, it
would have evoked a bit of disappointment, nothing more. People
would have taken the state’s integration with Pakistan in their
stride. But after 54 years, how does India change its borders —
and Constitution — without causing great harm to its polity? This
might reopen certain issues which India has more or less settled
after a long period of blood and sacrifice. Any change in the LoC
means a territorial adjustment in J&K. The composition of the
state is such that it has three regions: Muslim-majority Valley,
Hindu-majority Jammu and Buddhist-majority Ladakh. Pakistan wants
the Valley and has all along blessed the All Party Hurriyat Conference
that claims to represent it.
Were
New Delhi to give Pakistan the Valley or accept it as an independent
state, it would do so on the basis of the population’s complexion.
It would be inferred that the Muslim majority area did not want
to stay with India. The Hindutva forces would probably be praying
for such a solution. It would help them polarise the country on
the basis of religion: Hindus and Muslims. Such an eventuality may
give them a majority in the Lok Sabha, otherwise an impossibility.
Imagine the effect of such a solution on the Muslims who carry even
today the cross of Partition. And what happens to the nation’s secular
ethos without which even democracy becomes a question mark?
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The
right of self-determination, or any such demand, is aimed
at transferring power to the people of Jammu and Kashmir,
not redrawing the boundaries
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Against
54 years of Kashmir’s integration with India, the insurgency is
only 12 years old. Even Hurriyat leaders like Yasin Malik have said
they took to arms in 1989 when they found that people could not
get power through the ballot. The crux of the problem is popular
rule, not the LoC. Islamabad trained and armed the Kashmiris who
went across the border. Now the gameplan is different because Afghans,
Sudanese and other foreigners have joined them to change what was
a liberation struggle into a jehad. Islamabad is offering them all
assistance and has set up camps for them, believing that one day
Kashmir will fall in its lap. It is clear that without Islamabad’s
sustenance, the uprising cannot go on. I do not condone the atrocities
and human rights violations that take place in the Valley because
of suppression. Some of us have written about them and Pakistan
has extensively quoted from our reports at international fora to
the embarrassment of India. The excesses have, indeed, drawn the
world’s attention to Kashmir and India will have to live down the
battered image it has got in the process.
But
the real question is that of governance, not borders. For this purpose,
there should be fresh elections in J&K under the supervision
of human rights activists from India, a suggestion made by Shabir
Shah, a popular Kashmiri youth leader. New Delhi, in turn, should
transfer to the states all subjects, except defence and foreign
affairs. (New Delhi’s 1951-52 agreement with Sheikh Abdullah gave
India these two subjects and communications.) Borders between Kashmir
on both sides should be made soft, depending how soon militancy
from across Pakistan ceases. The new government in Srinagar can
have its own flag, currency, seek foreign aid and receive tourists
from abroad. To help the people of Kashmir on both sides to participate
in matters of defence and foreign affairs, elected Lok Sabha members
from J&K should have the right to sit in Pakistan’s National
Assembly and those from Pak-Occupied Kashmir in Lok Sabha. But the
sovereignty of this part of J&K will vest with India while of
the other part with Pakistan.
The
right of self-determination, or any such demand, is aimed at transferring
power to the people of J&K, not redrawing the boundaries. How
will a change in the LoC make any difference if people are not given
real power? Musharraf should be considering these alternatives that
meet the aspirations of the people and not the ones which may tear
apart India’s fabric by religious or separatist forces.
While
mentioning Kashmir, Musharraf talked of symmetry. What he actually
conveyed was that progress in other fields would depend on the advance
made on Kashmir. Both fields have to have the same pace. The symmetry
logic is strange. Suppose we can make progress on one subject, must
we stop because Kashmir is not being solved? This amounts to giving
veto to those who will be sorting out Kashmir. Whatever is agreed
upon should be implemented first so that enough goodwill is generated
to solve Kashmir. Otherwise, we will get stuck unnecessarily.
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