Gulf News

AAP leader’s comment triggers row

KEJRIWAL DISTANCES HIMSELF FROM BHUSHAN’S CALL ON KASHMIR VOTE

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Aam Aadmi Party ( AAP) leader Prashant Bhushan’s reported call for a referendum on army deployment in Kashmir created a storm yesterday, with Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal quickly distancing his party from the purported statement.

Bhushan, a senior Supreme Court lawyer, himself clarified that his views had been twisted and that any reference to a referendum should not be construed as a plebiscite on Jammu and Kashmir’s merger with India.

“The AAP is of the view that Kashmir is an integral part of India. Needless to say I share this view,” he said in a statement here.

“Any reference to referendum shouldn’t be misconstru­ed to mean plebiscite on Kashmir’s relationsh­ip with India,” he added.

Fierce attack

As the Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP) mounted a fierce attack on Bhushan and the Congress and the Communist Party of India- Marxists ( CPIM) too made critical comments, Kejriwal said the AAP did not agree with the referendum call.

“Deployment of army [ in the Kashmir Valley] is a matter of internal security. There is no question of having a referendum on it.”

Kejriwal, however, added: “The feelings of the local people should be taken into account, otherwise it will be a threat to democracy. But our party is not in favour of any referendum.”

The Congress, which props up the AAP government, earlier asked the new party to clear the air. Harsh Vardhan, who heads the BJP in the Delhi assembly, dubbed Bhushan’s views as “anti- national”.

“How can anyone have the guts to say all this on Kashmir?”

The most serious attack on Bhushan came from BJP’s Arun Jaitley, who utilised the opportunit­y to blame Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first prime minister, for “mismanagem­ent” of the Kashmir issue.

“Issues relating to Jammu and Kashmir were substantia­lly decided by Nehru. The effects of his mismanagem­ent of Jammu and Kashmir continue to leave their impact even today,” he said in his blog

Without naming Bhushan, Jaitley said: “The same leader had two years ago suggested a plebiscite in Jammu and Kashmir where people must be free to decide whether they wish to stay with India or otherwise. “The issues of national security cannot be decided by populism or referendum. They can only be decided on security considerat­ions,” he said.

Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah added that government­s don’t “need to conduct a referendum [ on] every tricky situation”.

The Communist Party of India said army deployment must be decided by the government and cannot be an issue of public debate.

Under attack, Bhushan said yesterday that Jammu and Kashmir was an integral part of India. But he said that the deployment of armed forces in large numbers in the state must be done with people’s wishes.

He said it was his view that the deployment of armed forces “in huge numbers within Kashmir not for external defence or to prevent infiltrati­on but for the security of the people ... should not be done without the consent of the people of Kashmir.

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