The Asian Age

KARGIL WINS BATTLE OVER ADMINISTRA­TIVE REJIG

Imam Khomeini Memorial Trust, an influentia­l religious outfit of Kargil, earlier alleged that the govt’s decision not to have a joint headquarte­rs of the new revenue division at Kargil was politicall­y motivated Protesters claimed that they were denied jus

- YUSUF JAMEEL

The people of Kargil who have stood by the country in difficult times including the 1999 Kargil war have won a battle for their own rights.

After days of protests, during which thousands of people including women braved sub- zero temperatur­es and marched along the streets of the town against placing Kargil under a newly- created administra­tive and revenue division for the Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir, the residents have managed to convince the state’s administra­tion to open a joint headquarte­r in Kargil along with the one in Leh.

On Friday, governor Satya Pal Malik, after meeting a delegation of Kargil coordinati­on committee which was at the forefront of the week- long protests, announced that the newlycreat­ed administra­tive and revenue division of Ladakh will have its headquarte­rs jointly at Leh and Kargil.

“There will be offices at both places in Leh and Kargil. Two additional divisional commission­ers will be posted, one each in Leh and Kargil. The divisional commission­er and inspector general of police will spend half their time in Kargil and half in Leh,” he said.

Earlier, Kargil residents launched a series of strikes, protests and dharnas against the government’s decision of having the revenue division’s headquarte­rs at Leh.

“The people of Kargil feel betrayed. They always threw in their lot with rest of the country, braved bullets and bombs during active hostilitie­s with Pakistan and even in socalled peace times, risking their lives for India. But they are being denied justice and what is long overdue to them,” asserted former lawmaker Haji Asgar Ali Karbalia.

The governor’s administra­tion in a major move had earlier approved creation of a separate administra­tive and revenue division for the Ladakh region. The move triggered a celebratio­n in Leh, the largest town in Ladakh but caused gloom in Kargil, the other major town of the landlocked region.

The leaders and representa­tives of various political, social, religious and trade organisati­ons of the predominat­ely

Shia Kargil quickly met and decided to launch an agitation against the government’s “discrimina­tory” move. They said they are not opposed to the creation of a separate administra­tive and revenue division of Ladakh as such but are disconcert­ed mainly over the government’s announceme­nt that the newly c r e a t e d posts of divisional commission­er and inspector general of police for Ladakh will permanentl­y remain based in Leh.

Until recently, the Ladakh region was a part of the Kashmir division. Jammu, the third region of the state, has a separate administra­tive and revenue division headquarte­red in winter capital Jammu.

The people of Kargil demanded that both Leh and Kargil be made the headquarte­rs of the newly carved out division for six months on rotational basis. A coordinati­on committee of various parties and groups in Kargil which is spearheadi­ng the agitation said that all the democratic­ally elected members of various official bodies, including the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Developmen­t Council ( LAHDC), Kargil, will resign en- mass if this demand is not conceded forthwith.

A spokesman of the coordinati­on committee clarified that the demand of the people of Kargil is not laced with any communal overtones. “We’re against making Leh the permanent headquarte­rs of the newly created division for logistic reasons. The distance between Leh and Kargil is greater than that between Srinagar and Kargil,” he said. He pointed out that Kargil district also comprised the Zanskar area which is predominan­tly Buddhist.

Ladakh covers about 1,17,000 square kilometres out of which about 30,000 sq. km are under Pakistan’s direct control. It contains the Ladakh Range which is a south- eastern extension of the Karakoram Range and the upper Indus river valley. It is one of the most sparsely populated regions in J& K and, as per the 2011 census, the total population of Ladakh was 2.74 lakh.

Already the powers of local governance had been decentrali­sed by formation of separate Hill Developmen­t Councils for Ladakh’s two districts- Leh and Kargil.

According to the government, there had been persistent demands from the region for creation of a separate division claiming that the tough and distinct topographi­c conditions.

Former chief ministers Mehbooba Mufti and Omar Abdullah had not only supported the demand of keeping newly announced Ladakh division headquarte­rs on rotational basis between Leh and Kargil but also asked for creation of separate revenue divisions for the state’s two Muslim majority regions of Chenab valley and Pir Panjal, currently part of Jammu division.

The NC leader added, “It seems the decision on creation of the new revenue division headquarte­red in Leh was taken in haste and was contrived to pitch one community against the other.”

Imam Khomeini Memorial Trust, an influentia­l religious outfit of Kargil, earlier alleged that the govt’s decision not to have a joint headquarte­rs of the new revenue division at Kargil was politicall­y motivated

 ??  ?? A file photo of residents of Kargil district raising slogans during a protest against Leh being made the permanent headquarte­rs of the newly- created Ladakh revenue division.
A file photo of residents of Kargil district raising slogans during a protest against Leh being made the permanent headquarte­rs of the newly- created Ladakh revenue division.

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