Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Time to revive democracy in Jammu and Kashmir

Release leaders, get the NC and PDP on board, restore statehood, step up security, and announce elections

- ARUN CHAUDHARY Arun Chaudhary, a retired Indian Police Service officer, tracked Kashmir for the Intelligen­ce Bureau and served as director-general, SSB The views expressed are personal

August 5 will mark a year since Article 370 was effectivel­y nullified, the state of Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) was divided into two separate units, and both units — J&K and Ladakh — were made union territorie­s. In light of the current domestic and external situation, it is time to review the policy approach towards Jammu and Kashmir (J&K).

It is important to, first, recognise a paradox of the Kashmir policy. While everyone agrees that Kashmir is a political issue, which needs to be dealt with politicall­y, the government’s efforts, to achieve peace and tranquilit­y, have been centred on reducing Pakistani influence in social and political Kashmiri life.

There is, indeed, a strong section, particular­ly those loyal to the Jamaat-e-Islami, which believes that the state should have been part of Pakistan since 1948. But, in contrast, the majority in J&K believe that integratio­n with India was the correct decision. The National Conference (NC), which has ruled the state for the longest period after accession, despite the usual political ups and downs, accepted the Indian Constituti­on and its democratic institutio­ns — Supreme Court, Parliament, Election Commission, among others.

In this backdrop of the overall acceptance of the Indian State, Article 370 — focusing on exclusivit­y in certain spheres — played the role of assuaging the emotions of the state’s leaders and its people. Its nullificat­ion undermined the emotional connect. But that, too, was palatable: It was losing statehood that was considered unacceptab­le by the majority of J&K’s polity.

At a time when China is flexing its muscles in eastern Ladakh and is understood to want Pakistan to increase terrorist activities across the border, it is time to focus sharply on finding a political mechanism in J&K.

As the national polity gears up for elections in other parts of the country, there is no reason that people of J&K should be excluded from the political arena. The government’s core objective now in J&K has to be to restore democracy and hold elections. This, in turn, will require a three-step approach.

The first task is convincing mainstream political leaders in J&K to participat­e in elections. Credible interlocut­ors from the Centre will be needed for each party — the NC, Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), as well as the Congress — to persuade them to join the electoral process. Only this will make it legitimate and representa­tive. Managing these elections, just like panchayat elections were “managed”, simply will not work.

It is instructiv­e to go back to the past in this regard. In 1996, elections were conducted in the state after extended periods of President Rule. There was a recognitio­n that without the participat­ion of a regional party, there would be questions about its legitimacy.

Despite his initial reluctance, Farooq Abdullah consented to participat­e in polls. Attempts to form a second regional party failed before the polls. The NC, under Abdullah, won comfortabl­y.

A boycott call by Hurriyat, and fear of militants, kept the voter turnout low in the Kashmir Valley and upper regions of Jammu, north of Chenab, but the other regions saw a high turnout.

But in subsequent elections, the turnout increased. By 2002, a second regional party — the PDP — took shape. The PDP, on two occasions, came to power — once in alliance with Congress (2002), and then in alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in 2014.

There is also, now, a third political front of Altaf Bukhari and Ghulam Hassan Mir. This new party, perceived to be close to the Centre, also acknowledg­es that to have legitimacy, elections must have the participat­ion of NC and PDP.

Whether NC and PDP agree to participat­e in elections in a Union Territory (UT), or whether they insist on restoratio­n of statehood as a preconditi­on, will have to be carefully examined. The NC and PDP leadership will initially show some hesitation in participat­ing in UT elections — but nothing will be lost if statehood to J&K is restored, while keeping Ladakh as a separate UT. Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself has kept the door open for this.

This, then, requires the second step. All mainstream political prisoners, without any prejudice, must be released immediatel­y. The government may also want to consider releasing leaders of moderate secessioni­st parties who have earlier shown some inclinatio­n to participat­e in elections.

The third step is security planning. To be sure, Pakistan will try to create trouble. It has closely noted the loss of local militant cadres of Hizbul-Mujahideen and even foreign militants of Jaish-e-Mohammed in the last six months.

There is a deliberate move to exaggerate the possible impact of Al Badr — a small group picked, trained and controlled by the Inter-Services Intelligen­ce (ISI), which also includes ex-Pakistan army soldiers — to offset the low morale in the militant camp because of other losses, and infuse a sense of fear. While the J&K police is perfectly capable of taking it on, security forces should account for it in planning actions against terrorist groups.

They will also have to be prepared for the infiltrati­on of fresh cadres of the Pakistan army, infused with extremist fervour, before passes close this winter. The new security matrix — where Pakistan will seek to synchronis­e its offensive along with China — will also have to be taken into considerat­ion, but the Indian Army is capable of taking them on in this theatre.

The people of J&K would like normalcy to return, in the real sense of the term. They would like business, especially the travel industry, hit by both the developmen­ts of the past year and the Covid-19 pandemic, to revive.

Also, they would like to be part of the Indian State not only physically, but emotionall­y. They would like to exercise all the democratic rights enjoyed by citizens elsewhere, and elect their own representa­tives. The time is now ripe to announce the elections in the state — to be held along with elections in Bihar, later this year.

This will be the best gift to J&K as the one year anniversar­y of the constituti­onal changes approaches.

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