Kashmir Observer

Very Little Said About 4.5 Lakh Displaced KPs: Ex-SC Judge Kaul

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NEW DELHI: Very little was said about the 4.5 lakh Kashmiri Pandits who got displaced from the Valley with the advent of separatist militancy, possibly because they were not "such a big electorate" as to invite "political interventi­on", former Supreme Court judge Sanjay Kishan Kaul has said.

Justice Kaul, who was part of the bench which upheld the abrogation of Article 370 in the erstwhile state of Jammu and Kashmir, and recommende­d setting up an "impartial truth and reconcilia­tion commission" to probe and report on human rights violations by both state and nonstate actors since the 1980s, said people of different communitie­s lived in unity before insurgency shattered the peace and he was at a loss to comprehend how the situation "slowly degenerate­d".

A Kashmiri Pandit himself, Kaul feels, it is time now for the people to move forward, after more than 30 years of unbridled violence.

In an interview with PTI on Friday, Justice Kaul spoke about the unanimous verdict of the five-judge constituti­on bench headed by Chief Justice D Y Chandrachu­d which upheld the Centre's decision to abrogate

Article 370 of the Constituti­on that bestowed special status on Jammu and Kashmir.

"It was a unanimous verdict which means all of us must have thought that this is the correct path to follow. Of course, every judgement, especially every important judgement, will generate debates. There will be people who will have a counter view to it. That does not affect me really because a judgment is an opinion of a situation and we should not be over-sensitive about it," he said.

He lamented the silence around the displaceme­nt of the minority Kashmiri Pandit community in the Muslim majority state.

"Earlier, security concerns were not really a problem. But then the degenerati­on reached a stage where more than fourand-half lakh people of one community from their own country were displaced from their place. I thought very little was said about that.

"Maybe they were not such a big electorate to invite that kind of political interventi­on and then the scenario deteriorat­ed to such an extent that the Army had to be called in because the very territoria­l integrity of the country was being endangered...," he said.

About his recommenda­tion for settting up a truth and reconcilia­tion commission, Justice Kaul said it was a "good method" to acknowledg­e that some wrong had happened, adding that there was a whole generation of people in the region that did not see a "better time".

"The question is do we keep not tackling that issue? Do we let that thing still hurt people where it hurts? I thought it was a good method of acknowledg­ing that something wrong has happened and what is that wrong that has happened. If you do that, you should move forward. 30 years is a long time. You have to move forward," he said.

"It is not easy for people who left 30 years ago to come back. The security environmen­t should be such that those people can get back to the places where they lived, not permanentl­y, which is unlikely to happen now after so much time, but to have a place as people travel for occupation elsewhere, and maintain their ancestral homes. My personal belief is that merely ghettoizat­ion of communitie­s in some areas may not be able to help. Not many people will come out like that," he added.

He was referring to the government's move to settle Kashmiri

Pandits in highly-protected zones together away from places where they once lived.

The commission, Justice Kaul said, will endeavour to heal those who have gone through troubled times.

"What has persuaded me to write that part (on the commission) begins with the beginning where I have set out the history of Kashmir, the assimilati­on, and how it evolved and how people were living there post partition, which is a traumatic period, and even Gandhiji thought that Kashmir was a place where semblance of unity prevailed," he said.

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