THE Republic of India will soon complete 69 years, but as citizens we delude ourselves on many counts. The most glaring is what the Kashmir issue is about: territory, not its people. As a result, we obsess about Pakistan, rather than address Kashmir. The BJP government has tightened the border, stymieing Pakistans efforts to send arms across; deployed high-technology, like lasers on the border and sophisticated eavesdropping on cross-border communication; and, through its local coalition partner, has used administrative sops to demonstrate how profitable it is to stay with India than to seek greener pastures. And yet, much to Pakistans delight, anti-India sentiment in the Valley remains strong, while 1990s militancy has made a comeback, led by a martyr for the new generation.
The other delusion is that there exists a pro-India constituency in Kashmir. Jammu is undoubtedly pro-India but it is not Kashmir, though many link the two for rhetorical purposes. If Kashmiris come to study or work outside their Valley it is not because they accept India in Kashmir; though it also does not mean they should be denied rentals or jobs or even neighbourly goodwill. Liberals think their sympathy for Kashmiri grievances is a beacon for Kashmiri-India reconciliation, but from the Kashmiri point of view, there is little difference between the conservative Indian, the liberal Indian, or the Indian Leftist. In 69 years, they have all refused to accommodate Kashmiri political aspirations.
The late Ghulam Rasool Kar tried to plant the Congress party flag in the Valley; thats as pro-India as it gets, considering that Sheikh Abdullah led the Plebiscite Front during the 50s and 60s. Yet even Kar, in his final days, told fellow Kashmiris: Never trust Delhi. Former spy chief AS Dulat, my co-author on Kashmir: The Vajpayee Years, says this about the Sheikhs son, Dr Farooq: In the end, hes a Kashmiri. Dr Farooq the man whom separatists hate the most like any Kashmiri, does not trust Delhi.
Despite 69 years of opportunity, India has not earned Kashmiri trust. This is not surprising, seeing the reactions in Delhi by journalists, some of whom have forgotten non-partisanship that Burhan Wani was a terrorist who deserved death; or that some international jihadi syndicate used his funeral to expand the war against India. All those mourners on Saturday did not think he was a terrorist. Only a colonial oppressor, like Imperial Britain, would perceive an entire population as terrorist or terrorist-supporting.
Some Indians focus on the fact that Burhan had picked up the gun. Its ironic, given that India has turned the Valley into a part-garrison, part-open air prison. One even said Kashmiris should pursue their grievances in other ways, which is not only patronising but also ignores how in 69 years, Kashmiris are still stuck at square one after the brief promise of AB Vajpayee, there was the lost decade under Manmohan Singh, and now the panic-inducing Narendra Modi.
The talk of an international jihadi movement is misleading. Kashmir saw significant evaporation of global support following 9/11. Perhaps thats why there never was an al Qaeda in the Valley; though some Kashmiris may support Islamism, the majority clearly dont want their nationalism diverted or diluted by it.
Basically, Kashmiris dont trust us because we dont trust them. To us theyre Trojan Horses for Pakistan; we dont sit down to talk with them and instead treat them as Pakistani agents; and we wont even bring members of their collaborator class, like Dr Farooq, to our high table. We talk of a deal with separatist Nagas that includes separate flags and passports, but never think of something similar for Kashmir, because unlike Nagaland, it is a legacy of Partition.
Finally, we cannot expect Kashmiris to trust us if were arrogant. As reported in a national daily, the decision to kill Burhan was taken two months ago, despite an opinion in a section of the establishment to take him alive. He could have been caught, but the gang in power in Delhi wanted to send a tough message. It wants to rule by fear.
After the protests over Burhans death die down, the anti-India sentiment will deepen even if a superficial normalcy returns. And when National Security Advisor Ajit Doval comes to the end of his tenure, he will find that he was neither able to sort out the problem, nor manage it, much less erase it completely. He will find that history, too, takes no prisoners.
The article first appeared HERE
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