Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

What pride can there be in losing out on justice?

- HARINDER BAWEJA EDITOR, SPECIAL PROJECTS

An eight-year-old is sedated and gang-raped in a prayer hall and then bludgeoned to death. Among the perpetrato­rs are a police officer and a juvenile. The post-mortem report found that the young child — our child, your child — had laceration­s on the vagina and her death was caused by “asphyxia leading to cardiopulm­onary arrest.”

The gruesome details of the pre-planned kidnapping, rape and murder of should make our collective blood boil, but that has not been the case in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), a region deeply divided along religious lines.

The killing has instead sparked outrage across J&K, first because the Mehbooba Mufti government handed over the case to the crime branch following protests from the Bakerwal community to which the victim belonged.

It then took a communal turn after an outfit called the Hindu Ekta Manch was set up by politician­s in support of the accused. At the forefront of those who rallied behind the accused are two Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) members of the Mehbooba cabinet.

The fissures have only widened in a state where the two separate regions of J&K appear to be at war. Worse, Mehbooba’s Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the BJP are involved in a dangerous tug of war despite being in an alliance stitched together in March 2015, in the hope of bridging the gulf between the two regions.

The late Mufti Mohammad Sayeed (Mehbooba’s father), who was the principal architect of the alliance, was clear about why he wanted the BJP as an ally, despite opposition from his daughter, who had campaigned and sought votes on the main pretext of keeping the BJP out of the Valley.

Jammu backed the BJP and the Valley voted in large numbers to keep the BJP out.

Despite the hard political reality that makes the BJP and the PDP strange bedfellows, Mufti was clear that joining hands was the only way forward. In the middle of nail-biting negotiatio­ns, Sayeed flew out to Mumbai to play a few hands of bridge.

There, in the financial capital, he also chose to do a few interviews, one of which was with this paper.

“Ideologica­lly we are the North Pole and the South Pole but the state has given us a historic opportunit­y to unite Jammu with Kashmir and to unite the state with India. It is important to connect the two regions and I believe I can do it. I am saying, delegate the responsibi­lity to me. VP Singh (the late former PM) used to tell me that politics is the art of possibilit­y and of managing contradict­ions. Let me tell you on record, I want to leave a legacy. I see an opportunit­y to mend the divide... and I will form a government only with the BJP, or I’m out,’’ Mufti had said to HT.

Mufti had the philosophi­cal wisdom to back the decision he took then, but into its fourth year in power, Mehbooba must ask what kind of ‘legacy’ she is promoting by being part of an alliance that is clearly being stretched to its seam.

She has lost control of south Kashmir – PDP’s stronghold – where statistics back the contention that one young Kashmiri is joining the militant fold every three days. In Jammu, which must appear very distant to her — many miles further than it was during Mufti’s time — the BJPbacked lawyers associatio­n is waving the national flag to whip up a fervour in support of rapists and murderers.

Politician­s have taken great pride in referring to J&K as the jewel in India’s crown. What pride, they must ask, can there be, in preventing a charge sheet from being filed; from justice being denied and finally, from deepening political and communal fault lines being drawn?

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