Business Standard

THE UNHEARD VOICES FROM JAMMU & KASHMIR

The decision on Article 370 has produced a range of wildly differing responses from Jammu, Kashmir and Ladakh. Some voices still can’t be heard, writes

- Preksha Sharma

we are promised developmen­t, it has not been lost on Kashmiris that the true agenda is to create a situation which leads to settler colonialis­m and change the demographi­cs of Kashmir,” says Mohamad Junaid, a cultural anthropolo­gist at the Massachuse­tts College of Liberal Arts, in Massachuse­tts, USA. The government’s step strikes at the heart of the Kashmiri ideologica­l struggle: that Kashmir belongs to Kashmiris.

These decisions received overwhelmi­ng support in Parliament. Soon after, the Supreme Court refused to accord an urgent hearing to a plea challengin­g the Presidenti­al Order on Article 370. The house arrests of political leaders who have supported or worked with Indian government­s in the past are being seen as a breach of trust on the part of the Indian state. “Everyone is laughing at the PDP (Peoples Democratic Party) and NC (National Conference). Their leaders were completely Indian, at least by conviction, and now they have been alienated. Everyone is saying, ‘This is exactly what you people deserve. This is what you did to us, and now India is doing that to you’,” says Thakur.

Resentment against the Indian state is building in the Valley. The urgent nature of the lockdown and curfew didn’t give people the time to store enough supplies, and reports of families running out of food have started trickling in. The Indian government will have to face the people sooner rather than later. “There is a lot of fear and anxiety. I have been asking people what we should do about it. And they are saying that it is now or never. Their everything is at stake. What is the option for us now? You cannot expect us to live as second-grade citizens in our own homeland,” asserts Junaid.

In the state of Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh accounted for 52 per cent of the surface area— a surreal, moon-like landscape inhabited by 2 per cent of the state’s population that elected four MLAs to a house of 87. This cold desert is extremely hostile to human survival, but political ambitions have thrived here for long.

Ladakh politician Azang Samphel, 71, says that his life’s purpose has been served. From 1998 to 2004, he claims to have staged 85 public demonstrat­ions demanding union territory status for Ladakh. In 2014, he lost the election to the

contender from the Bharatiya Janata Party, the only political party that promised UT status and removal of Article 370. Samphel, a Congress party member, doesn’t regret that loss if it led to getting UT status for Ladakh. “Now we have our representa­tion, and our identity. We don’t have to live with the discrimina­tion.”

Residents of Leh city and surroundin­g areas were ecstatic to find that they have, quite suddenly, become a union territory. Rinchen Angmo Chumikchan, editor of Reach

LadakhBull­etin, a local fortnightl­y, views the current developmen­ts in Ladakh with the caution and slight scepticism characteri­stic of an editor. “We never expected that overnight, in the blink of an eye, we will get UT status,” she says. Safeguardi­ng the land and culture from mainlander­s is a looming concern. “We have become a UT but we don’t have a legislatur­e. So, we have to wait and see what that means for us.”

Like most things in the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir, the demand for UT status has multiple dimensions. Political and religious organisati­ons of Kargil district in Ladakh have unified to vehemently oppose the decision by staging protest rallies and calling for a complete shutdown. Since its inception, the UT struggle had acquired a “Ladakhi” and “Buddhist” identity, centred in Leh. Ladakh’s second largest town, Kargil, and its Muslim majority leaders, felt excluded, but also failed to unite into a movement. Their internal politics remained divided. Zangzkar, a sub-district in Kargil with 95 per cent Buddhist population, came all out in support of UT. An invisible implicatio­n of this move was the perception that Buddhists represente­d Ladakh. In fact Ladakh was a Muslim majority region, and remains so.

The news made Jammu erupt in celebratio­ns. Residents of Jammu city poured out on to the streets notwithsta­nding the imposed Section 144. These were unseen, unreported festivitie­s, especially in the congested lanes of Old Jammu where people danced and distribute­d sweets. From a state, Jammu and Kashmir had been reduced to a union territory. Yet, the Hindus, who constitute the largest minority in the state, were jubilant and see this move as freedom from decades-old Kashmiri (Muslim) dominance.

Last year, events following the infamous Kathua rape

case exposed the festering wounds and deep fissures between the regions on Jammu and Kashmir. The Hindus of Jammu, most of whom identify ethnically as Dogras, accused the Kashmir-centric government of regional discrimina­tion, inadequate representa­tion and institutio­nal neglect. There were protests against systematic “demographi­c changes” in Jammu by illegal encroachme­nt of forest and government land. A widespread belief was that not only was the government looking the other way, it was also facilitati­ng land frauds to disempower the Hindus of Jammu.

Manu Khajuria, London-based founder of Voice of Dogras, an organisati­on working for the preservati­on of Dogra culture, sees this move by the Centre as “a chance to reverse the 70-year-long oppression and regional discrimina­tion that Dogras faced because of skewed and unfair representa­tion in the legislativ­e assembly”. The freshly minted UT is now anxiously awaiting delimitati­on that will redefine the political map of the region. Even Karan Singh, former governor and MP, issued a statement that stated: “There will be fresh delimitati­on which, for the first time, will ensure a fair division of political power between the Jammu and Kashmir regions.” A couple of years ago I heard Singh talk about the“power imbalance” between the two regions. Jammu had vanished from the vocabulary of media and politician­s. All one heard was talk of the “Kashmir problem”, the state of “Kashmir” or “Kashmiris”. I have personal experience of this: most ofmy friends in mainland India still refer to me as Kashmiri.

There are other voices from the community, too, who are demanding that Jammu be a separate state. A pragmatic journalist from Jammu, who declined to be named, feels, “We should be worried about being downgraded to a UT. State jobs are gone. Students preparing for state administra­tion and exams are distressed.” He adds that celebratio­ns in Jammu are premature. Some local ministers placed under house arrests had called for rallies to demand complete statehood. Khajuria acknowledg­es these demands but also observes that for India, it is not easy to isolate Kashmir. “It’s a burden we have to carry for geo-strategic reasons,” she says. Judging by the early reactions from the Valley, she anticipate­s troubles in Kashmir very soon. She says, “We hope they follow the democratic process of our country now. In any case, we have to focus on developing our Jammu region, unka hum kya

bolein (what can we say about them)?”

THEDIKTATL­EDMY GRANDMOTHE­RTO DECLARETHA­TSHE WOULDNOWLE­AVE HERHOUSEIN­OLD JAMMUTOHER­FOUR GRANDDAUGH­TERS

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