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January
1, 2002
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Who
will light the candles at the border this year?
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No war, but no peace
I have
not been able to see the logic of closing all avenues of people-to-people
contact between India and Pakistan. Newspapers and books are already
banned. Visitors are not allowed to cross the border. The stoppage
of train, bus and plane services snaps the last tenuous link. Islamabad
has gone a step further: it has banned all the Indian TV networks.
Atal
Bihari Vajpayee was foreign minister when he had proposed some 25
years ago to make the borders between India and Pakistan soft. The
then prime minister, Morarji Desai, had snubbed him, arguing that
spies from the other side would come in, as if they used only such
channels to cross over. Vajpayee, now prime minister, has veered
round to the same point of view which he had then resisted. The
suggestion of soft borders has, however, spurred thousands of people
to assemble each year on the Wagah-Amritsar border to light candles
on the night of August 14-15, to mark the moment when the two countries
were born. The Pakistanis were slow to respond. But they were 45,000-strong
this year compared to 20,000 from India.
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That the Pakistan government is not answerable
to its people is well known. The Indian government is; it’s
a pity it has taken the initiative to distance Indians and
Pakistanis
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How
do you snuff out relations? Officially, the governments have snapped
ties. But what makes them assume that a mere fiat will smother the
sentiments which men and women, young and old, have nurtured over
the years? For thousands of them, who have struck relationships,
the time spent in each other’s countries is a precious memory they
cherish. How do they become strangers all over again? They had made
no efforts to adjust or conform. There was natural kinship. They
had always sensed one another and even a chance meeting ignited
familiarity.
Many
in both countries have argued whether the contacts really helped
or whether the efforts reeked of appeasement. What they forget is
that the contacts became the pressure which resulted in summit meetings,
like the ones at Lahore and Agra. Even otherwise, the talks between
people from both countries have allowed catharsis, given them a
venue to vent their anger. A dialogue bruises pride and evokes humility.
How does people-to-people contact put government interests in jeopardy?
The
attack on Parliament demanded the strongest action against the terrorists
or those who nourished and sponsored them. The nation was justifiably
angry. The series of diplomatic measures, from recalling the high
commissioner from Islamabad to halving the mission’s strength, indicated
the depth of feeling. Was it also necessary to stop people of one
country from meeting those in the other? It has unnecessarily queered
the pitch.
Terrorists
and obstructionists have their own agenda of hate and hostility.
They are the ones who have never liked the idea of people-to-people
contact. They have succeeded because guns fall silent when people
talk. Now all ties at the non-official level have been cut off.
With no information, there will be more ignorance, more suspicion
and more hostility. The liberal school of thought, which is beginning
to emerge in Pakistan and ask for normalisation of relations with
India despite the Kashmir problem, may be crushed ruthlessly. In
the past decade, a new breed of Indians and Pakistanis have been
coming up with no baggage of the past and with all eyes fixed on
the future, devoid of rancour and recrimination. They are not apportioning
any blame nor are they dwelling on the past. They are talking in
terms of trade, technology and an economic zone. They cannot even
meet, much less plan. The ground has been left completely to those
who are opposed to any relations between India and Pakistan.
My
impression is that the hawks have won. Their mindset has dictated
the new policy. They were always against any contact beyond the
formal and diplomatic. In Pakistan, they could not sustain the two-nation
theory when people from the other side spoke the same language,
ate the same food and wore the same clothes. Keeping the two apart
was the best method available to them. In India, the hawks had a
sense of superiority and behaved like a Big Brother who had an area
of influence and who expected small countries to look up to it.
Some
of the hawks, who occupied high positions on our side, in their
heart of hearts believed the two-nation theory, although they talked
in terms of one nation. Such elements made Gandhiji fast unto death
to force New Delhi to pay its liability of Rs 67 crore to Pakistan
after Partition. By closing access from across the border, New Delhi
has played into the hands of fundamentalists in both countries.
They are the ones who hate liberalism and open thinking. New Delhi
also has let down those Pakistanis who are fighting dictatorship
on the one hand and bigotry on the other. They are trying to develop
a South Asian identity, transcending religions and borders. It is
partly their pressure that has forced Pakistan President Pervez
Musharraf to take action against the fundamentalists. Not only that,
the people-to-people contact was nurturing a common sentiment in
the subcontinent. It was conveying the message that the governments
had developed a vested interest in their quarrels and, therefore,
people must take upon themselves the responsibility of sorting out
their differences. Stopping the contact was the worst thing that
New Delhi could have done.
That
the Pakistan government is not answerable to people is well known.
But the Indian government is. It is a pity that the latter has taken
the initiative of distancing the people of India from those of Pakistan.
Because of the communal elements, the anti-Pakistan feeling turns
anti-Muslim. India cannot afford that. We have 140 million Muslims.
A democratic, pluralistic society like ours should formulate a policy
that would differentiate between the Pakistan government and its
people. The government should be chastised but not the people. In
anger, New Delhi has made no distinction.
As
a person who has worked for reconciliation between India and Pakistan
for decades, I find the New Year arriving on a somber note. India
and Pakistan are growing distant. But I do believe that one day
the high walls that fear and distrust have raised on the borders
will crumble and the peoples of the subcontinent, without giving
up their separate identities, will work together for the common
good. This is the faith I have cherished ever since I left my hometown
in Sialkot some 55 years ago. And this is the straw I have clung
to in the sea of hatred and hostility that has for long engulfed
the two countries. It is this hope and not so much the nostalgia
with which both Indians and Pakistanis often look back.
But
the reality is, I feel, that events will continue to meander to
a situation where, even if there is no conflict, there will be no
settlement; even if no hostility, no harmony; and even if there
is no war, there will be no peace.
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