The Asian Age

Neglected Jammu

- Bhopinder Singh The writer is a retired lieutenant- general and a former lieutenant­governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Puducherry

Sa n d w i c h e d between the Kashmir Valley and the states of H i m a c h a l Pradesh and Punjab are the “Duggar” lands of the valiant Dogras of Jammu region who withstood the vicissitud­es and ravages of the violent sub- continenta­l history. As a composite part of the state of Jammu and Kashmir, along with the predominan­t Kashmir region and the moonlike haven of Ladakh, the plains of Jammu region have been in a state of perpetual neglect, a far cry from those days of glory when it was the epicentre of the princely state of J& K, in the preIndepen­dence days.

The Dogra- ruled Jammu was one of the four states that were given the highest “21gun salute” status in recognitio­n of its premier protocolar­y status during the British Raj days. The Jamwal dynast, Raja Gulab Singh, along with his legendary Gen. Zorawar Singh establishe­d the state of Jammu that included the wazarats of Gilgit- Baltistan and Ladakh, Frontier illaqas and jagirs of Poonch, Bhadrawah and Chenani, and also the provinces of Jammu and the Kashmir Valley.

This Jammu- ruled state was the largest princely state with an area of 84,471 sq km. Contrary to the present situation and perception­s of the past, Jammu was a liberal, inclusive and progressiv­e region having high socio- economic and civic infrastruc­ture.

Jammu’s independen­t status ended with the signing of the Instrument of Accession in favour of India on October 26- 27, 1947. One of the three preconditi­ons of the Union of India for signing the accession treaty with the Dogra ruler, Maharaja Hari Singh, was the installati­on of the virulently anti- Dogra- rule leader from the Kashmir Valley, Sheikh Abdullah, as the immediate “Prime Minister”. Later, the chaos, continued mishandlin­g and the unsettled borders with its overenthus­iastic neighbour, Pakistan, ensured that the wounds fester and morph into a full- fledged armed insurgency in the Kashmir Valley, driving the national attention and imaginatio­n, essentiall­y towards the Kashmir Valley. That the Jammu division has approximat­ely 43 per cent of the population ( 26 per cent of land mass) and the Kashmir Valley 55 per cent of the population ( 16 per cent of land mass) further ensured that the practical representa­tion amongst the state lawmakers in a participat­ive form of democracy further veered the focus disproport­ionately towards the Kashmir Valley, as opposed to a more equitablyp­roportiona­te attention towards the perenniall­yneglected Jammu region. In the scheme of things, the Kashmir Valley has been consistent­ly accorded the lion’s share of all investment­s, focus and priorities, with Jammu penalised for its “safe” fate.

Today, with Pakistan’s interferen­ce and the regressive domestic politics, the societal divide within the state has spun the demographi­c reality of the three divisions ( Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh) to assume the simplistic fractures of religious differenti­ation.

Even the legitimate socio- economic grouse of the “Jammu region” versus the “Kashmir region” narrative has boiled down to a predominan­tly religious perception, which detracts, diminishes and short- sells from the irrefutabl­e nuts- andbolts of the Jammu’s case of discrimina­tion. The terribly tragic Kathua incident followed the consistent script of trivialisa­tion, politicisa­tion and c o m m u n a l i s a t i o n , which ended up giving a wholly undeserved “Jammu- versus- Valley” colour to the issue, ably supported by the inelegant statements and ineptitude of some local politician­s. The very relevant and unanswered questions and concerns of the Jammu citizens on the sudden arrival of the Rohingyas in their midst got unnecessar­ily and unintellig­ibly intermixed with Bakarwal community, who are of a distinct ethnicity from their co- religionis­ts in the Kashmir Valley, and have absolutely no bearing on the Rohingyas from Myanmar! The lazy perception­s and simplifica­tions around disparate issues juxtaposed, muddied and inadverten­tly shamed “Jammu” into portents of insensitiv­ity around the case. Yet again, the genuinenes­s of the Jammu’s multiple concerns were frittered away, failed by its own politician­s. The Jammu region is a forgotten footnote in the national perspectiv­e, but it punches way above its weight in terms of national service, commitment and glory. The patriotism and martial ethos of the region feeds the bulk of Indian Army’s highly- decorated regiments i. e. Jammu & Kashmir Rifles ( former Princely State Forces), the Dogras and the Jammu & Kashmir Light Infantry — besides populating other regiments and services. From the highest gallantry award winners like the Param Veer Chakra Capt. G. S. Salaria to Subedar Bana Singh, Jammu region is an embarrassm­ent of riches in valour and service to the nation. Despite this, the sense of deprivatio­n in Jammu is all psychologi­cal, material and, above all, political, which despite the PDP- BJP experiment could not table and address the Jammu perspectiv­e, in its entirety or sincerity.

The Sikri Commission ( 1979) had prescientl­y noted the injustices to Jammu region by stating that “there existed discrimina­tion and favouritis­m in the field of developmen­t, employment and education in the context of different regions, which was giving rise to irritation­s and tensions among the people of state” — a finding that was consistent with the earlier Gajendraga­dkar Commission. Symbolical­ly, the “J” is missing in various state administra­tive services like KAS ( Kashmir Administra­tive Services), KCS and KPS. The Kashmir- centricity feeds a sense of contempt and subjugatio­n when Jammu region ( along with Ladakh) is doled out pittance, from both the Centre and the state, which are skewed heavily towards Kashmir. The inequity manifests in the continuous­ly suboptimal allocation towards developmen­t of Jammu’s tourism, infrastruc­ture, education facilities and overall representa­tion in various state platforms.

However, the worst sleight for Jammu is the hurtful sense of a “wronged” history and narrative. Despite the unparallel­ed gallantry, avowedly secular and deliberate­ly multicultu­ral reign of the Dogra rulers, the widely believed script does extreme injustice to real history. Since Independen­ce, Jammu has carried the national “burden” of surrenderi­ng its rightful share of budgets in favour of Kashmir, wilfully initially, and not so any more. Even the recent Kathua case dimmed the perception of Jammu owing to those very politician­s, who, like their predecesso­rs, have done little to address the longstandi­ng woes of Jammu. The growing cries of “anti- Jammu”, are clearly not reaching New Delhi or Srinagar.

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