Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

In Jammu and Kashmir, a year of loss and suffering

Citizens have been denied their democratic freedoms. Developmen­t has got stunted. And the future is uncertain

- RADHA KUMAR Radha Kumar is a policy analyst. Her latest book is Paradise at War: A Political History of Kashmir The views expressed are personal

On August 5 and 6 last year, the Narendra Modi administra­tion took two steps that fundamenta­lly altered the lives of the people of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K). First, it removed the special status that the state enjoyed in the Indian Union under Article 370 of the Indian Constituti­on. Then, Parliament enacted the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisa­tion Act, which demoted and divided the state into two Union territorie­s.

To ensure that there was no protest against these steps, the Modi administra­tion arrested all the state’s political leaders the day before, except those belonging to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), imposed Section 144, and snapped all communicat­ions in and with the state.

The BJP claimed these measures would improve security, and give the people of J&K the same rights as prevailed in the rest of India. One year has passed. How do we assess those claims? Take security first. There has been a sharp rise in insecurity on the borders, but some improvemen­t internally. We are still struggling to reverse the Chinese incursions into Ladakh, and cross-border firing by Pakistan has risen sharply. Internally, however, there has been a drop of around 30% in casualties comparing August 2019-July 2020 with the same period in the preceding year. But we also find a rising trend in casualties from April 2020, which is worrying. The reduction in casualties was achieved at considerab­le human cost. According to figures given by the J&K administra­tion, this came at the cost of the detention of 6,600 people — including children — under the draconian Public Safety Act, the continuous imposition of Section 144 to date, the restrictio­n of mobile telephony and Internet to 2G services, and a new media policy that allows security agencies to censor media outlets.

Most of the detainees have been gradually released, but the majority of political leaders spent anywhere between eight-to-11 months in detention. Many of them were released only after agreeing that they would not criticise the August actions. Former chief minister Mehbooba Mufti is still under detention and there is controvers­y over whether Congress leader Saifuddin Soz is under house arrest or not.

Since the August lockdown was only gradually being relaxed when the Covid-19 lockdown was imposed, J&K has suffered one year of closures. According to the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce and Industry, businesses across all sectors of the economy have lost close to ~40,000 crore in the Valley alone. Even discountin­g these figures, the economic cost to the former state as a whole must be even larger.

Losses in education and health are similarly grave. Schools had just reopened after the August lockdown and winter vacations, when the pandemic struck. Online classes barely worked on 2G networks. In a recent report issued by the Forum for Human Rights in Jammu and Kashmir, of which I am a member, teachers, students and researcher­s spoke in the same voice about the damage done to human developmen­t, of which education is a critical pillar. University students often missed college admissions, teachers and researcher­s could not participat­e in conference­s or send papers for publicatio­n.

Health care profession­als faced the same problems. Doctors could not seek specialist advice on serious illnesses or participat­e in exchanges of the latest informatio­n on Covid-19. In the first few months after August, pharmacies could not get deliveries of medicine and clinics were closed.

Because of the ban on 4G networks and the continuous imposition of Section 144, most of these problems persist, along with a host of others. The media has been deeply affected, both editoriall­y and financiall­y. Anyone who reads the local papers can see the difference before and after August 2019. There is some reporting but no comment on either the August actions or their implementa­tion over the past year.

Though challenges to the removal of special status and reorganisa­tion of the state are pending in the Supreme Court, the Modi administra­tion has proceeded to implement both. New domicile rules have replaced the permanent resident certificat­es, raising fears of further job and industry losses as well as long-term fears of losses of land and other privileges. The latter impact Jammu more than the Valley; reportedly 2.9 lakh applicatio­ns for domicile certificat­es have been made in Jammu as against 73,000 in the Valley.

The past year has been one of a terrible loss for the people of Jammu and Kashmir. Not only has developmen­t been rolled back and incomes fallen, political rights to representa­tion, civic rights to informatio­n and communicat­ion, and human rights to freedom of expression, protection against arrest and attendant rights, to bail or a speedy trial, have all been denied.

The only gain has been in counter-insurgency, and that too small in absolute numbers. We should, of course, be glad that even a couple of hundred lives have been saved — but we should equally ask whether banning 4G has really contribute­d to it, and how a drastic curtailmen­t of rights can possibly be justified in the name of counter-insurgency.

Worst still, we are yet to hear the voices of the people. One year has passed, but we do not know what they feel about losing their special status under Article 370 and its implementa­tion, or what they feel about being divided and turned into two Union Territorie­s. We don’t even know whether these government actions are constituti­onally valid.

Many ask, what can be done now to win Kashmiri hearts and minds. After what they have undergone, I am doubtful whether forgivenes­s will come so easy. But the first step would be to restore special status as well as statehood, hold elections and open a dialogue based on the promises made within the Instrument of Accession. The fact that the Modi administra­tion is unlikely to take these steps does not make them any the less necessary.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India