END OF FREEDOM STRUGGLE IN KASHMIR?
-DR. ABDUL RUFF COLACHAL
_____________
Future and present
life of Kashmir Muslims are being
dictated by some scrupless section of Jammu Kashmir, Pakistan and India. As a result,
in the force of uncontrollable
currents and developments, Kashmiris are at a crossroads.
True Kashmiris in Jammu Kashmir are now disappointed as
their valuable votes have been rendered useless by their political leaders and
central government.
Jammu Kashmir is now under President’s rule and Governor
assumes real power in the state, officially.
President Pranab Mukherjee approved the recommendation of Jammu and
Kashmir Governor N. N. Vohra as deadlock continued in the State over formation
of the new government after voters handed a fractured verdict in assembly
elections.
According to latest reports, the J&K Governor N N
Vohra had written to the Indian President about the continuing political
impasse in the state. He has suggested several options, including Governor’s
Rule.
Neither the Governor nor Indian government waited for
deadline of January 19 given to JK parties for formation of government in JK.
Caretaker Chief Minister Omar Abdullah had requested the
Governor to relieve him of his duties. After the hung verdict in assembly polls
on December 23, the State has not witnessed installation of a newly elected government
on account of hung verdict and talks remaining elusive between the PDP and the
BJP.
Though the PDP and the BJP have been in talks over the
last fortnight, an agreement has proved elusive. One section within the BJP
believes that the party will benefit from being in government while another
feels that the ideological differences with the PDP over CM and Deputy CM for a
Hindu cannot be bridged. The PDP, too, is split with many of its members and
constituents uneasy about an alliance with a party which they perceive as
“anti- Muslim”. But a substantial section within the PDP is keen to form
government and believes that a tie-up with the BJP will ensure benefits,
including a smooth flow of funds from the Centre for the state’s development.
The BJP said it was keeping all options open, including Governor’s Rule.
It is now clear that either Kashmiri parties have been
denied permission by Indian government to form a government without the
participation of BJP, or Kashmiri parties have chosen themselves to be
treacherous to Kashmiri voters.
The PDP could have easily formed a government with the
help of National Conference that has offered unconditional support for the PDP.
However, the most viable option in JK suggested by the governor and New Delhi
was a PDP-BJP government. While the numbers of both parties comfortably add up
to well over a majority, the attempt to form a partnership though has been a
tortuous one. One of the known hurdles is the ideological differences between
the two parties, especially on the issue of Article 370 of the Constitution of
India which gives special status to Jammu and Kashmir. The scrapping, or at
least revision, of Article 370 has always been high on the BJP’s agenda. In
this election it strategically chose to keep the issue on the backburner,
preferring instead to focus on development. This makes it somewhat easier for
the BJP and the PDP to get together.
Clearly, BJP does not want development in JK if the party
does not rule Kashmir.
Another obstacle is the issue of chief ministership.
While the PDP believes that it should have the chief minister’s chair since it
is the single largest party, the BJP has been pushing for a rotation system
with the chief ministership being shared between the two parties. This is not
an unusual arrangement and there is a precedent in J&K itself when Mufti
Mohammed Sayeed, the chief patron of the PDP, shared chief ministership with the Congress’ Ghulam Nabi Azad. Under
the agreement, Sayeed was CM from 2002-2005 and Azad from 2005-2008. Since the BJP
has known Hindutva agenda for Kashmir valley, the PDP refused agree for a Hindu CM or Deputy
CM.
True, BJP performed far better than in the 2008 elections
where it won only 11 seats but anti-corruption mood tilted verdict to BJP’s
advantage this time. The continuing hold
of Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the electorate was a factor in the BJP’s
impressive showing in the Hindu-dominated seats. But the BJP failed in its much-publicised
goal of ‘Mission 44’ — achieving a majority on its own in J&K.
Incidentally, Jammu region had the highest voter turnout
which possibly helped the BJP.
Generally speaking, a rotation agreement makes good sense
due to the arithmetic of the electoral verdict but the Hindutva agenda of BJP
puzzles Kashmiri Muslims. The PDP and
the BJP enjoy a geographical majority in Kashmir and Jammu regions
respectively, with the BJP having won 25 of the 37 seats in Jammu and the PDP
25 of the 46 seats in Kashmir.
In contrast, the BJP could not open its account in the
Kashmir Valley winning only 2.2% of the vote there. This is despite the BJP
giving 40% of its tickets to Muslims in the state. However, for the first time
a Muslim candidate, Abdul Gani Kohli,
won on a BJP ticket.
Kohli won from the Kalakote constituency in the
Muslim-majority Rajouri district in Jammu. In Ladakh, too, the BJP performed
poorly being unable to win any of the four seats in the region where alone
Congress made its mark. .
In fact, the BJP’s overall vote share in J&K fell by
over nine percentage points from 32.4% in the 2014 parliamentary elections
going to show that state elections do not always mirror the national polls.
Despite good performance by Muslim parties in Kashmir,
lack of unity among Muslims was evident. While the BJP was able to consolidate
the Hindu vote in Jammu, the Muslim vote was divided in Kashmir. The PDP, the
NC and the Congress all vied for the Muslim vote preventing the PDP from fully
capitalising on the anti-incumbency sentiments against the outgoing Chief
Minister Omar Abdullah and his NC party. Despite anti-incumbency and the effect
of the floods that ravaged the state not long before the elections, the NC did
not do as badly as expected winning nearly 21% of the vote and managed to keep
the PDP’s tally down. Given the circumstances, the Congress too did reasonably
well winning 12 seats, five fewer than what it had won in 2008.
Clearly, the winner of Jammu Kashmir in recently held
assembly poll is neither PDP nor NC but BJP. In fact, Indian BJP government has
won the polls held in Jammu Kashmir recently that produced hung assembly and a
split mindset among Kashmiri parties.
BJP won because notwithstanding a majority in the assembly the Kashmiri
parties could not agree to form a government, offering chances for BJP to
indirectly rule JK.
Maybe, JK governor and
BJP would try to coerce the PDP
to come to term with Hindutva agenda and
form a joint government some time later. It is quite possible another poll is
looming large in JK. And, as usual, the
separatist Hurriyat parties would not contest the poll unless Pakistan asks
them to change their approach tactfully. . .
True Kashmiris stand betrayed! They know all talks about freedom are bogus
and pure deceit. India, Pakistan and Kashmiri parties play a sort of joint
politics to fool the Kashmiri people. Those Kashmiris who live abroad also do
not seek sovereignty but favors from Pakistan and India. Business is the essence of their brand
politics too.
They have got innocent Kashmiri Muslims killed by Indian
forces in encounters, both real and fake ones; they have betrayed the Kashmiris
with doublespeak and mischief. .
As it stands, the present clueless status of Kashmiri
Muslims will
remain almost forever, although the freedom-sovereignty road for
Kashmiris cannot be said to be closed once for all. .
|