‘J&K interlocutor must engage with separatists’
NEW DELHI: Experts said the Centre’s special representative for Kashmir, Dineshwar Sharma, must engage in a dialogue with separatists in the Valley.
Last month, the government had appointed the former Intelligence Bureau chief as its special representative for a “sustained dialogue” with all stakeholders in Jammu and Kashmir.
In a five-day visit to the state earlier this month, Sharma had met political leaders, student groups, youths and a delegation of Kashmiri Pandits.
“My plea to the interlocutor will be to reach out to all sections. The point is that he (Sharma) must reach out and I would plead there must be a response (from the Hurriyat leadership),” Wajahat Habibullah, a former chief information commissioner and an ex-IAS officer of the Jammu and Kashmir cadre, said at an event on Saturday.
Air Vice Marshal (Retd) Kapil Kak asked why the government or the interlocutor had not opened communication channels with the separatists yet.
“The government should be more sincere. I don’t see a mandate (for the dialogue process), don’t see a timeframe by when there should be a report,” Kak said.
Both Ha bib ulla handKak were part of a concerned citizens group led by former foreign minister Yashwant Sinha that visited Kashmir last year in the aftermath of the violence following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen terrorist Burhan Wani.
They were speaking at an event organised by Congress leader Salman Khurshid’s Hind Bhartiyam Foundation.
“The problem of Kashmir is intrinsically linked to the idea of India and if we can’t ensure that a resolution is found for Jammu and Kashmir then the idea of India will be imperiled and irretrievably challenged,” Khurshid said. Habibullah, however, said by appointing yet another interlocutor the government was “moving in circles”.