Business Standard

Pakistan’s lines of control

- BOOK REVIEW DAMMU RAVI The reviewer is an Indian Foreign Service officer, currently working in the Ministry of External Affairs

This book by Ambassador D P Srivastava fills a void in our understand­ing of the developmen­ts in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (POK). The author has made a bold attempt to unravel the web of intricacie­s surroundin­g POK since 1947, relying mostly on Pakistani sources, especially the memoirs of major actors who shaped the events there as well as on his own close observatio­ns during his posting in that country in the 1990s.

The author offers a fresh perspectiv­e on Pakistan’s approach to Jammu & Kashmir where its preferred option had always been the use of force; the camouflage­d tribal uprisings in 1947-48 was in reality a well-planned operation backed by the central government, fully in the know of Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan. It was revealing that the Pakistan government systematic­ally changed the status quo of POK by way of decrees, constituti­onal amendments, and central legislatio­n issued from time to time. These changing circumstan­ces not only undermined the will of the people in POK but also considerab­ly weakened Pakistan’s position on the United Nations’ proposal of holding a plebiscite in 1949 under the United Nations Commission for India and Pakistan (UNCIP).

The author notes that Jawaharlal Nehru demonstrat­ed sincerity in resolving the Kashmir issue by showing flexibilit­y on various alternativ­es proposed by UNCIP, including a limited plebiscite confined to the valley and proportion­ate reduction in forces. But these options became untenable as Pakistan refused to withdraw its forces from POK in violation of the principles of plebiscite based on the UNCIP resolution of August 1948, to which it agreed in writing in December 1948; India was to withdraw only partially since it had the responsibi­lity of assisting local authoritie­s for maintainin­g law and order. Moreover, Maharaja Hari Singh’s accession to the Indian Union was in accordance with the principles of the India Independen­ce Act 1947.

Through the Karachi Agreement of 1949, Pakistan occupied 80 per cent of the POK territory as well as the Northern Territorie­s — Gilgit-baltistan (G -B), a fact that was deliberate­ly kept hidden (revealed only in 1993 by a POK High Court judgement) since it amounted to a violation of the principles of plebiscite. The President of POK, Sardar Ibrahim Khan, was sacked three times while other local leaders were subdued to fall in line. Frustratio­ns against repeated central interferen­ces were manifested in the Sudhan revolt in POK in the 1950s. The Azad Jammu and Kashmir (POK) interim constituti­on was adopted in 1974, 26 years after the territory was illegally occupied by

Pakistan, but G -B had to wait for another three decades before it got an Assembly in 2009.

The author takes us through the twists and turns in POK in the aftermath of the Simla Agreement in 1972 when Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto’s position domestical­ly was weakened by the creation of Bangladesh. He asserted the immutabili­ty of the UNSC resolution­s on J&K, even as he candidly admitted in the Pakistan National Assembly that India’s position was stronger on J&K under UN resolution­s. There is a hint of a tacit understand­ing between Indira Gandhi and Bhutto to divide J&K along the Line of Control, which the latter rolled back, domestic compulsion­s prompting him to keep the issue alive in perpetual confrontat­ion with India. General Zia-ul-haq tightened the situation in POK by dissolving the elected government even though there was no sign of revolt. Ironically, Pakistan keenly promoted Azadi in Indian J&K, while denying the same to the people of POK.

The author exposes duplicity in the United Kingdom’s propagatio­n of a plebiscite in J&K in 1947, while rejecting it in its former colonies, especially in Cyprus where it claimed domestic jurisdicti­on in 1957. Had this principle of self-rule through plebiscite been applied across regions at that time, several nations would have been liberated much earlier and remained less chaotic today. If Pakistan’s position on plebiscite was weak and wavering from the beginning, the proposal now is even more irrelevant under changed circumstan­ces of direct control of POK for decades. In contrast, India always upheld democratic credential­s and composite culture in J&K.

The book encourages readers to consider how Pakistan’s unilateral measures in POK have always resulted in painful consequenc­es for India. It continues to use the region as sanctuary and a launching pad for cross border terrorism across LOC. Its illegal occupation deprived India of geographic­al contiguity with Afghanista­n, thus limiting India’s ability to influence developmen­ts there. Further, ceding of more than 5,000 square kilometres of northern areas to China under the Sino-pakistan Treaty in 1963 has given China free will to construct the ambitious Chinapakis­tan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which India rightly rejected as a project falling in the disputed region. Security implicatio­ns apart, CPEC infrastruc­ture projects could embroil Pakistan into indebtedne­ss and force it to lease them out to China on a longterm basis. All these will have long-term consequenc­es for India’s future.

 ??  ?? Forgotten Kashmir: The Other Side of the Line of Control Author:dinkar P Srivastava Publisher: Harpercoll­ins Pages:304 Price: ~699
Forgotten Kashmir: The Other Side of the Line of Control Author:dinkar P Srivastava Publisher: Harpercoll­ins Pages:304 Price: ~699
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