The Sunday Guardian

Valley resents Pak PM’s ‘no-independen­t Kashmir’ statement

- SRINAGAR/ANANTNAG

Among the section of the people in Kashmir, who are vocal about the “right to self determinat­ion”, Pakistan Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbas’ recent statement that independen­t Kashmir is not a viable option has invoked marked resentment.

Reacting on Abbas’ statements, a senior professor in Kashmir University’s Department of Media Education and Research Center (MERC) told this newspaper that Pakistan cannot decide all by itself what the Kashmiris want. “To tell you the truth, Pakistan PM Abbas’ statements aroused anger and disapprova­l among the journalism students here, and also some other students of other department­s. Most of the students we spoke to said they would rather support independen­ce as an option than merger with Pakistan. According to them, Pakistan PM Abbas’ bewilderin­g statement might weaken the struggle for independen­ce,” a senior faculty member of MERC said on the condition of anonymity.

Professor Syeda Afshana, another Professor at MERC said, “Are they (Pakistan) trying to validate the two nation theory by making such statements?” She dismissed Abbas’ statements saying, “If religion could be a binding factor among different population­s with distinct culture, why is there sectarian violence of such frightenin­g proportion­s within Pakistan which is predominan­tly Muslim? In the age of the internet, people have successful­ly come out of their ghettos and we live in a multicultu­ral society where religion has taken the backseat.”

Prof Muslim Jaan of Kash- mir University added: “Those who regularly protest against India and chant ‘azadi’ obviously have anger and disillusio­nment with India. But that should not be misconstru­ed as love for Pakistan.” Most people this reporter talked to in Srinagar were dismissive of Abbas’ statements and said that they have always batted for independen­t Kashmir as a viable option, contrary to what Pakistan is saying, which is a country that is “culturally alien” to them. However, in the villages in South Kashmir, which has seen the maximum protests and civilian casualties since the killing of Burhan Wani, anti-India protesters said they endorsed the Pakistan PM’s position with respect to the future of Kashmir.

“We have always had a soft corner for Pakistan and you should come here on a day when Indian and Pakistan teams are battling it out over a match of cricket. You will get all your answers,” said Zahoor (name changed), at a village at High Ground, Fatehgarh, Anantnag. The boy in his early 20s, who has several FIRs registered at Police Station Anantnag, added: “The very constituen­cy for independen­ce has been manufactur­ed by the Indian agencies to divide the ‘movement’. Even the UN Resolution in 1948 had only two options—India and Pakistan. The pro-independen­ce lobby is nothing but an extended arm of the Indian state’s PR machinery in the valley.”

He was seconded by Hamid (name changed), a cab driver who hails from South Kashmir. “The pro-independen­ce activism is a recent phenomenon. Throughout, Kashmiris have identified themselves with Pakistan,” he explained.

But the more well-offs and the more educated ones in South Kashmir, as in other parts of the valley, in particular in capital Srinagar, strongly disapprove­d of such sentiments. “I am surprised and shocked to hear such pro-Pakistan sentiment among the villagers who come from the South,” exclaimed noted film-maker and theatre personalit­y Mustaque Ali Ahmed Khan. “This is news to me. You wouldn’t find such overwhelmi­ng sentiment for Pakistan in the cities,” Khan told this reporter.

Noted j ournalist and prime time commentato­r on TV, Gowhar Geelani explained: “The pro-Pakistan utterances in South Kashmir could also be a reactionar­y attitude due to the marked civilian crackdown there since July 2016. These people know that what would hurt India the most is the expression of love and support for Pakistan and may be that is the reason for such outpour in recent times.” Another senior journalist working with a noted English daily in Kashmir, who did not wish to be named, said: “The Kashmiris are an emotional race. After Burhan Wani’s killing, then Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif made overwhelmi­ng statements eulogising the slain militant. This seems to have worked successful­ly with anti-India protesters. But such sentiments are not permanent.”

Abbas had said on 5 November, while speaking at a conference “Future of Pakistan 2017” at the London School of Economics’ South Asia Centre, “I have not seen support for that concept (independen­t Kashmir). This is something that is floated often but it really has no basis in reality.”

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