FrontLine

Pandits’ alienation

- BY ANANDO BHAKTO

The Modi government continues to claim that its policies have solved the problems in the Union Territory and restored normalcy, but the situation on the ground, including the recent spate of civilian deaths, belies such claims and has ended up

frustratin­g the Kashmiri Pandits.

ON October 25, at a well-hyped event at Srinagar’s Sher-e-kashmir convention centre, Union Home Minister Amit Shah had a bulletproo­f glass shield removed as he declared his intent to speak to the people directly. “Time has gone when militants would exploit the situation. No one will be allowed to kill civilians.…” he said, as he lauded Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha’s administra­tion for ushering the erstwhile State of Jammu and Kashmir into an era of developmen­t. He then took on mainstream politician­s of Jammu and Kashmir in a now identifiable bellicose tone, accusing them of corruption, nepotism and perpetuati­ng anti-india sentiment by calling for dialogue with Pakistan. In Amit Shah’s assessment, New Delhi’s iron-fist and bureaucrat­ic control of Kashmir has resolved or, at any rate, put an end to the decadesold conflict in a region that has imploded violently time and again since 1990. He said as much: “Today, we have succeeded in replacing guns with pens even in militancy hotbed of Pulwama and other districts of Kashmir.”

Nothing could be farther from the truth as the recent spate of civilian killings in Kashmir demonstrat­es. It is likely that Amit Shah’s fallacious self-applauding was meant for audiences in the Indian mainland, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) having reduced Kashmir to a tool to excite people’s imaginatio­ns. But even that did not happen as several developmen­ts in Srinagar preceding Amit Shah’s arrival there and throughout his stay in the valley ran counter to his claims extensivel­y. In October alone, nine civilians were killed in different pockets of Kashmir. The deceased included two Kashmiri Pandits in what was the first assault on the community since the peak militancy years of the early 1990s. It led to an instant flight of migrant Kashmiri government employees from the heavily guarded camps built especially for them across the Himalayan valley.

On the night of October 24, while Amit Shah was in the Union Territory, the youths of Kashmir spilled onto the streets to celebrate Pakistan’s victory over India in a cricket match. According to a senior leader of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), although pro-pakistan sentiment is not unusual, especially over cricket, the whooping by students, including women, regardless of the consequenc­es, is an indicator of how much ground the Union government has lost in the Union Territory. Amit Shah had no plausible explanatio­n either for these embar

rassing optics or for the dangerous escalation of violence that has left minorities in Kashmir fretting.

Inside a poorly furnished chamber of a hotel in the Indira Nagar locality of Srinagar, now under the strict vigil of personnel of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), a sarpanch from the Kashmiri Pandit community repudiated everything Amit Shah had taken credit for. The Sarpanch, who spoke on condition of anonymity, denied that the condition of his community had improved in the Modi years. “That is a narrative invented by the BJP and perpetuate­d by migrant Kashmiri Pandits whose interests are embedded with the BJP’S. They have little knowledge of the ground situation. Their raucous support for the BJP’S Hindu nationalis­m on prime time TV debates adds to our predicamen­t and vulnerabil­ity,” he said, implying that the killing of Hindus in Kashmir could be a fallout of India’s majoritari­an politics.

The Sarpanch’s views resonate with most Kashmiri Pandits living in the valley. This reporter managed to enter the heavily fortified Vessu camp in Anantnag, where currently outsiders’ entry is barred, and wheedled one resident to speak. Although guarded in his choice of words, the Kashmiri Pandit indicated that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s direct control of Kashmir, the decision to revoke Jammu and Kashmir’s special status and the repression seen in the aftermath of August 5, 2019, when the revocation came into effect, coalesced to create an atmosphere that seems inward-looking, leading to the community’s isolation. “The local [people] have been supportive all [the] while, [and] they are still, but something changed with the abrogation of Article 370. What they [New Delhi] are doing is impacting social equations here,” he said.

Another resident of the Vessu camp, who works in the Education Department, had a litany of complaints against the BJP. Speaking over the phone, he told Frontline that both the United Progressiv­e Alliance government of the past and the incumbent Modi government failed to give migrant Kashmiri Pandits the promised 6,000 government jobs. “We live in pitiable conditions; successive government­s have been largely indifferen­t. The flats inside the camps are one-room shelters with a kitchen and a bathroom. There is seepage of water, and these structures are in a decrepit condition, some of them built without a plinth,” he said.

Promotions have been few and far between, and the Pandits who live in the camps do not have any claim over these accommodat­ions. “There is an undertakin­g that we will have to vacate the flats once we retire. Why can’t we be given permanent residences? How else do we feel a sense of certainty about our future in the valley?” the Education Department employee asked.

Nanajee Wattal, a Kashmiri Pandit who was elected Sarpanch in 2018 from Akin Gram B in South Kashmir’s Anantnag district, said that the Lieutenant Governor administra­tion had failed to provide the office-holders from the minority Pandit community with security. “My personal security officer was transferre­d in 2019. Since then I’m without security. I have no option but to either remain locked in a hotel room in Srinagar provided by the government or spend time in Jammu. There is a provision for incidental security when an officehold­er travels to his constituen­cy, but favouritis­m is rampant. I am unable to visit my constituen­cy because of the lack of security,” Wattal complained.

Sanjay Tikoo, president of Kashmiri Pandit Sangharsh Samiti, agreed that the Modi government’s political incursions in Kashmir and its overall repressive handling of Muslims in India had contribute­d to social unease in the valley. He rued the narratives that successive Indian government­s and the think-tankers aligned with them had built over the decades at their expense. “Even before India’s Independen­ce, as early as 1931, there was a concerted move to project Kashmiri Pandits as the face of the Indian ethos and Muslims as cheerleade­rs of Pakistan. Our distinct ethnic identity as Kashmiris was overlooked,” Tikoo told Frontline.

He traces the genesis of the Kashmir conflict to the cosmetic nature of the accession of Jammu and Kashmir to India. He framed it as “an accession [agreement] essentiall­y between [Jawaharlal] Nehru’s family and Sheikh Abdullah’s family”. Unlike what the BJP’S well-oiled public relations machinery would have one believe, Tikoo said it was misleading to blame the Congress alone for the present mess, particular­ly the community’s exodus from Kashmir in 1990. “I blame the entire state machinery, be it the intelligen­ce-gathering agencies, the political leadership and the security apparatus. This [killing of Kashmiri Pandits] was happening inside India, and you could not do anything to

prevent it,” he said, somewhat riled.

Tikoo said that the staple of the BJP’S politics, committed as it is to placing the majority’s interest on top, had added to the vulnerabil­ity of the 800-plus Kashmiri Pandit families in the valley who had stayed back against all odds. He said that when militancy erupted in 1990, youths who picked up the gun largely believed in Kashmir’s composite culture. The present day is a gloomy contrast, according to him. “There were militants who targeted Kashmiri Pandits then, but there were thousands of Muslim brethren who also saved us. Today I see a lull,” he says, crestfalle­n.

Historical­ly, there have been competing narratives and choices between Kashmir’s Hindu and Muslim population­s. The Muslim refrain is that the well-off Kashmiri Pandits, though much fewer in number, sided with the ruling elite over the centuries and their political and social positions augmented, whereas the majority community lived in abject poverty. The Kashmiri Pandits, on the other hand, are agitated over a “unilateral Muslim narrative” that puts the blame for their exodus in 1990 on Jagmohan, the then Governor of the State. According to the Muslim perception, Jagmohan planned to quell dissenters with an iron hand as the Gawkadal massacre betrayed.

On January 21, 1990, two days after he took charge, the CRPF opened fire on unarmed protesters at the Gawkadal bridge in Srinagar. The Muslims maintain that Jagmohan facilitate­d the Kashmiri Pandits’ flight to Jammu on the night of January 19, 1990, in order to save them from any retaliatio­n that might take place in reaction to his coercive ways. Kashmir Pandits thoroughly reject that claim. They allege that the National Conference propped up this narrative, and later Rajiv Gandhi perpetuate­d it since both the N.C. and the Congress had an axe to grind with Jagmohan. Kashmiri Pandits contend that the Muslim narrative ignores the targeted killing of Hindus that had begun as early as March 1989 and continued routinely until May 1990, which left them with no choice but to flee.

A Kashmiri Pandit, who was living in the valley until he recently fled to New Delhi, said: “The message from the mosques was threat-laden. It was clear that an armed section wanted us to leave. Calls were given to either assimilate [convert] or flee, and leave women behind. If there was any doubt, the killings made it clear. It is convenient to blame Jagmohan; it absolves some people’s conscience but to us it is an indicator that any articulati­on that does not match the majority’s understand­ing of events will be rebuffed.”. He said that much of the Kashmiri Pandits’ support for the BJP is reactionar­y: they felt betrayed by Rajiv Gandhi’s endorsemen­t of the Muslim narrative of their exodus. He admits that these sentiments had been brushed under the carpet but were resurfacin­g under the Modi regime.

A case in point is the debate on whether the recent killing of Hindus in the valley was communal in nature. An overwhelmi­ng sense prevails among Kashmiri Muslims that militants are targeting people irrespecti­ve of their religious identity. The trigger for the killings is a person’s pro-india affiliatio­n, they say, pointing out that of the 28 civilians killed in 2021, only five were Hindus. Kashmiri Pandits not only maintain that they were targeted because of their religion but are saddened that there is blanket acceptance of terrorist explanatio­ns that come in the aftermath of Hindu killings.

CROSS-BORDER PROVOCATIO­N?

Soon after the popular pharmacist Makhan Lal Bindroo was gunned down in Srinagar on October 6, a new extremist group called The Resistance Front (TRF) took responsibi­lity for the killing, accusing Bindroo of covertly working for the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh. Incendiary messages slandering the deceased’s character were circulated over Whatsapp. Kashmiri Pandits said that although their Muslim counterpar­ts mourned Bindroo’s death along with them and there was genuine solidarity, what was worrying was that most of them seemed to believe the TRF’S descriptio­n of things without question. While it is not easy to dissect what happens in the mystifying alleys of a conflict region anywhere in the world, an interactio­n with Kashmir’s mainstream political leadership gives one the sense that Bindroo’s killing was green-flagged from across the border, most likely to create a fear psychosis and thwart the BJP’S perceived project to change the demography in the erstwhile State. Another objective, according to the mainstream leaders, could be to puncture the BJP’S claims of having created normalcy in the valley, as the killing of a Kashmiri Pandit was bound to be covered extensivel­y in the national media.

A senior PDP leader said the killings were Pakistan’s tactical response to the BJP’S attempt to change the demographi­cs of Jammu and Kashmir by stepping up the process of domicile certification of nonlocal people. “Pakistan knows that the goodwill it enjoys in Kashmir is by virtue of the salient Muslim population living here. It would do all it can to prevent India from flooding Hindus into the [erstwhile] State,” he said. Before the abrogation of Article 370, jobs and land rights were exclusive to the natives of Jammu and Kashmir, who were referred to as “State subjects”. The new domicile rights have ended that exclusivit­y.

And yet, despite all that complexity, there is a consensus between Kashmir’s Muslims and Pandits that the relaying of communal messages under Modi’s watch has pushed India to the edge of a violent implosion. Sanjay Tikoo warned: “Repression cannot continue forever. The BJP’S treatment of minorities is pushing India towards inevitable armed strife.” Former Chief Minister Farooq Abdullah shared this apprehensi­on. Soon after the Manoj Sinha administra­tion booked students and staff of two medical colleges in Srinagar under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act for celebratin­g Pakistan’s cricket victory, Abdullah said: “A volcano is building up even as they [BJP] think they have silenced [the people].” m

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