The Sunday Guardian

Make Ladakh, Jammu UTs to counter Pak’s Gilgit move

One slap from Islamabad merits creation of two Union Territorie­s from Delhi.

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It would not be a surprise if the Nawaz Sharif government in Islamabad were to formally incorporat­e Gilgit-Baltistan as the fifth province of Pakistan. The China Pakistan Economic Corridor ( CPEC) passes through the territory, and Beijing is anxious to try and “legalise” its right of transit through that region, before investing still more money in what is the most ambitious project to have ever been attempted in Pakistan.

China has been steadily progressin­g in its bid to ensure warm water ports athwart the oil lanes of the Persian Gulf. In case India continues with its present relative lethargy in completing the Chahbahar port, it is likely that Beijing will take advantage of Delhi’s slow progress on the Iranian port (presumably caused by a deepening of the frowns in Washington at the Chahbahar project) in order to take control of that port as well, thereby giving the PRC an additional outlet into waters that have long been the undisputed lair of the US navy. Interestin­gly, both Chahbahar as well as Gwadar are situated within territorie­s that have traditiona­lly been Baloch, a community that has become even more disenfranc­hised than the much persecuted Kurds were before wresting control of still tenuous safe zones in Iraq and now in Syria.

Unfortunat­ely, given China’s quick reflexes, India’s Lutyens Zone follows what may be termed the “Digvijaya Singh mode of decision making”. Had the AICC observer in Goa shown initiative and speedily promised ministeria­l berths to independen­ts and smaller parties before the BJP did, it would have been Digambar Kamat, rather than Manohar Parrikar, who got sworn in as the new Chief Minister. In like fashion, had the Congress Party reached out in Manipur to the Naga party, when the results of the Assembly elections were becoming clear, that state too would have remained in their column. As it turned out, Amit Shah was faster off the block, and won both races despite voters having given Congress a head start. Global events, similarly, will not wait for Lutyens Zone politician­s and mandarins to spend days and weeks cogitating on choices that often melt away with time the way ice cream does in summer.

Both slowness and more often an absence of response have lost this country opportunit­ies that were at some point in time accessible. The roots of the unfolding strategic reversal in Gilgit-Baltistan go back to the Mountbatte­nNehru decision to enforce a ceasefire before the entire state of Jammu & Kashmir got liberated by troops commanded by General K.M. Cariappa. The ceasefire was another of Nehru’s decisions that may have been grumbled at by Sardar Patel, but was not opposed by him the way it ought to have been, by threatenin­g to quit and thereby bring the peacenik PM to heel.

Whenever Pakistan scores a geopolitic­al goal against India, our so called “counteratt­ack” usually takes the form of tough statements on television channels by both official spokespers­ons as well as non-official voices, whose martial spirit rises the farther they are from any actual or potential battlefiel­d. Expectedly, yet another “protest”, this time no less than a “strong protest”, has been lodged with both Pakistan and China over the way in which territory that belongs to India is being used to create a transport corridor between the PRC and the Islamic Republic of Pakistan. It is doubtful that any individual is naive enough to believe that yet another “protest” from Lutyens Delhi, no matter how “strong and stern” it be, will make any difference to the speed of implementa­tion of a project seen by Islamabad as a ticket to economic stability. What is needed is action, and this need not be in the form of a war with the China-Pakistan alliance, especially when the India-US military alliance is still a work in progress. Even the first of three Foundation Agreements is yet to be wholly operationa­lised, given the propensity for prevaricat­ion of the Lutyens Zone. Rather, what is needed is to follow the example of Pakistan in GilgitBalt­istan and “normalise” the situation in that part of the state that Mountbatte­n and Nehru allowed to be retained under the control of India. A start would be the creation of two more Union Territorie­s, that of Jammu and Ladakh, while Kashmir itself would remain a state with Article 370 and other special features relating to it intact for the present, even while the same would get removed from the two new Union Territorie­s. Such a move would be a non-military, but strategica­lly important, riposte to Islamabad’s incorporat­ion of Gilgit-Baltistan into its formal boundaries in order to “regularise” the land through which the CPEC enters the actual legal boundaries of Pakistan.

Ever since the one-sided accord entered into between Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah and Jawaharlal Nehru, both Jammu as well as Ladakh have faced discrimina­tion at the hands of the successive Valleycent­ric administra­tions headquarte­red in Srinagar. The proclamati­on of GilgitBalt­istan as the fifth province of Pakistan would provide adequate context for the creation of the Union Territorie­s of Ladakh and Jammu, whose government­s would thereupon break free of the overlordsh­ip of Srinagar. Indeed, this is the “azaadi” that both Jammu as well as Ladakh have long sought. In the case of the state that would remain after the two UTs get formed, Kashmir, it is important to ensure that the Pandit community be enabled to return with honour to their own land. Property that has been illegally seized from them or which has been effectivel­y stolen from them by paying ridiculous­ly low amounts or even zero compensati­on should be given back. Rather than protect the security of agents of Pakistan the way so much of the police and other security forces in that state are wasting taxpayer rupees in doing, such protection should be given instead to those members of the Pandit community who return to their “Panun Kashmir”. In every setback there is an opportunit­y, and in the case of Gilgit-Baltistan, any unilateral alteration of the status quo by Islamabad in the territory under its control should be responded to by similar measures on the part of Delhi. One slap from Islamabad merits the creation of two Union Territorie­s from Delhi.

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