The Asian Age

Why a J& K ‘ solution’ by Pak mantri won’t work

- Syed Ata Hasnain Alqamah Shaikh Via email

Since August, we have been hearing about Shireen Mazari working on a strategic conflict resolution model for Jammu and Kashmir. Pakistan’s human rights minister and well- known India- baiter has come up with a ninepage paper in the Journal of the Strategic Studies Institute, Islamabad, and spoke about it at an extensivel­y- reported seminar at Republic University College, Islamabad. Projecting it as the mother of all solutions, with references to historical cases of dual ownership of disputed lands like Andorra and settlement­s like the Good Friday Agreement in Northern Ireland, Ms Mazari goes wrong in trying to find solutions by branding India as the villain. She should have taken a statesmanl­ike approach, and examined the merits and demerits of the alleged dispute, which India doesn’t see as a dispute at all as it goes by the finality of the Instrument of Accession; which was reinforced by its joint parliament­ary resolution of 1994. It’s important to study Ms Mazari’s paper in the light of the glaring inaccuraci­es she chooses to highlight. Coming so early in the Imran Khan government’s tenure, and given the obvious influence she has in Pakistan’s strategic circles, this could well form the basis of Pakistan’s informatio­n campaign to sensitise the global community against India and its stance on J& K, which has never wavered.

Ms Mazari chose to blame previous government­s in Pakistan on a variety of issues, starting with a lack of their commitment towards J& K. She cites the lack of linkage of the 1949 Geneva Convention­s and customary humanitari­an laws to the supposed struggle of J& K’s people against alleged Indian excesses. She also quotes the 2002 Almaty Declaratio­n on an internatio­nal commitment to self- determinat­ion. Ms Mazari is livid that past Pakistani government­s didn’t passionate­ly pursue refreshmen­t of the internatio­nal community’s memory on alleged violations by India’s security forces in J& K. Among other points, her sharpest focus is actually on the questionab­le report of the UN Human Rights Commission led and drafted by UN high commission­er for human rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, whose credibilit­y as an independen­t, impartial observer was always in doubt. India had rejected this report right after its release.

Those familiar with Pakistani intellectu­als and their attitude at internatio­nal forums will recall that over the past few years their arguments appeared tutored by officialdo­m to focusing on returning to the 1949 UN Resolution, the recognitio­n of the United Nations Military Observer Group for India and Pakistan ( UNMOGIP) to perform its duties and the plebiscite issue. This is spoken of ad nauseam at every such gathering without taking the ground realities into considerat­ion. Ms Mazari uses this to project that Pakistan must not hesitate to return to the UN as a third party to resolve the so- called dispute.

It’s important to first remind Ms Mazari that earlier Pakistani government­s have actually done yeomen service to her nation by keeping the J& K issue alive through all possible routes — the physical proxy war in J& K, diplomatic interventi­ons at the UN and a large- scale internatio­nal informatio­n campaign to smear India. It’s a different matter that this hasn’t cut ice due to Pakistan’s complete lack of credibilit­y. Two issues go against the Pakistani minister’s arguments. First, Pakistan’s democratic credential­s are pretty low, due to the complete domination of foreign and internal security policy by not just the Army, but a plethora of outfits known collective­ly as the Deep State.

Second, Pakistan has been unable to convince the internatio­nal community on why it follows a two- track policy in its dealings to weed out terrorism from its territory. It held the successful Operations Raddul Fasad and Zarb- e- Azb targeting terrorists and networks that worked against Pakistan, but it continues to nurture and support the JamatudDaw­a and Haqqani Networks against India and Afghanista­n. Friendly and unfriendly terrorists within a state, with the latter being nurtured against neighbours, doesn’t exactly go well with the world community, which anyway sees Pakistan as one of the most dangerous places on earth, and the core centre for the growth of radical practices like blasphemy.

There are more core arguments against Ms Mazari’s so- called innovative suggestion­s. The 1949 UN Resolution no doubt stands on record as much as the plebiscite call, but she comes up with nothing to counter India’s basic argument that events since 1949 have overtaken the resolution. Pakistan does not recognise that the Instrument of Accession of October 26, 1947 signed under the Indian Independen­ce Act 1947 was also approved by Lord Mountbatte­n when he wrote: “It is my government’s wish that as soon as law and order have been restored in J& K and her soil cleared of the invader, the question of the state’s accession should be settled by a reference to the people.” That reference to

To be truly different, both Imran Khan and Ms Mazari must try to break the strangleho­ld of the Deep State on Pakistan’s numerous affairs. It won’t happen easily. the people was not possible since the invaders never vacated the territory they were supposed to. Thereafter, four attempts ( including an ongoing one) have been made at Pakistan’s instance to change the status quo by force, effectivel­y neutralisi­ng the resolution.

Ms Mazari also forgets that Pakistan remains a signatory to the 1972 Shimla Agreement, by which its dignity and self- esteem were restored with the return of 93,000 prisoners and large tracts of territory, and a clause that bilaterali­sm would be followed in all parleys. India implicitly believes in the Shimla Agreement for the furtheranc­e of relations, and UNMOGIP forms no part of it. Noticeably, despite Pakistan’s frequent interjecti­ons about the UN resolution and resort to UNMOGIP as an arbitrator on the ground, there has been little traction with the internatio­nal community.

Pakistan is in the throes of a major financial crisis. It could do well to improve relations with India through talks as it has itself proposed. However, to try and hold India to ransom with ongoing sponsored violence in J& K and other parts of India will not get it the legitimacy it seeks. To be truly different, both Imran Khan and Ms Mazari must try to break the strangleho­ld of the Deep State on Pakistan’s numerous affairs. It won’t happen easily, and neither will the intent of embarrassi­ng India into negotiatio­ns against the basic premises of history. Pakistan must recognise its place in the internatio­nal community and that of India too. There will be solutions to J& K aplenty once it learns that coercion and intimidati­on cannot go hand in hand with negotiatio­n.

The writer, a retired lieutenant- general, is a former commander of the Srinagar- based 15 Corps. He is also associated with the Vivekanand­a Internatio­nal Foundation and the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies. A thank you to the Supreme Court for giving a very good verdict on crackers, permitting the sale of only green crackers in Delhi. This judgment should be applied all over the country, so that pollution in the country can turn into fresh air. Because of pollution people suffer from severe diseases and lose their lives. The people, on their part, should also try their best to create an enjoyable atmosphere in Diwali. I hope people will cooperate in saving the country from pollution. IT SEEMS that Delhi BJP leader Rajeev Babbar is trying to make a mountain out of a molehill over Shashi Tharoor’s remark as he filed a criminal defamation complaint against Mr Tharoor for his scorpion remark about PM Narendra Modi. Mr Tharoor has said that he was quoting an unknown RSS leader who had said, “Mr Modi is like a scorpion sitting on a Shivling; you cannot remove him with your hand, and you cannot hit it with chappal ( slipper) either.” I don’t believe that Mr Tharoor did anything wrong in narrating this quotation. The objections over Mr Tharoor’s remark look to deprive his freedom of expression. M. F. U. Tandvi THE SUPREME Court in Pakistan acquitted Aasia Bibi of blasphemy charges, but the blasphemy brigade spread unrest against the court verdict. Citing threats to his life, Bibi’s lawyer left for Europe and the judges who acquitted her are also getting death threats which means that Bibi is not safe in Pakistan. She is still being kept in custody for her safety. Internatio­nal human rights organisati­ons must intervene for her safety. Khokan Das Kolkata

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India