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Importance Of Initiating Dialogue On Kashmir Is As Critical As Its Absence Is Dangerous

Branded anti-national, the only voices of reason that urge caution post Pulwama have gone unheard

Importance Of Initiating Dialogue On Kashmir Is As Critical As Its Absence Is Dangerous
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The images after the terrifying attack on the CRPF column last week were instructive. Flesh and metal strewn on the road after 40-odd human beings were killed in a single blast, a mangled shell of what used to be a bus and a dark circle of powder marked the spot of the blast. Immediately, a videotape of the 20-year-old suspected bomber Adil Dar began circulating in the Valley. Soon more images followed from the villages and homes of the CRPF personnel. Children lost, weeping as tiny hands clung to adults. Stunned grownups looking on, openly crying as the word 바카라martyr바카라 was sounded by reporters. Then, from Dar바카라s village, surfaced images of thousands of men, women and children at the funeral of yet another martyr바카라their own.

These images were followed by reactions of those far away from both mauled Kashmir and broken villages of the now dead. First, of course, came the instant media. So instant that more often than not they were deficit in thought. Mostly breathing fiery words, devoid of any understanding or analysis and, most worryingly, demonising the Kashmiri. All Kashmiris. There were some sober media reactions and some groping analysis in mainland India. The next day, some essays and commentary desperately sought moderation in rejoinder. Others did not.

A startling early media analysis was an inquest that straightway blamed Pakistan, dramatically declaring the bombing a clear act of war by Pakistan, and Islamic religious radicalism in Kashmir as the other reason behind it. That Dar had been recruited by Jaish-e-Mohammed, the Islamist militant group that claimed responsibility for the killings, was proffered as evidence of the religious radicalism part. This instant analysis was stark: Pakistan and Islamic radicalism. Case closed.

Constraints of space and deadlines notwithstanding, such rushed accusations and analyses are an illustration of the downside of our instant-­everything world. And the reactions of everyday people in mainland India have been no less startling. Or perhaps not, given the BJP government바카라s trajectory over the past five years.

In Jammu, there was immediate backlash against Kashmiris who live there, or had moved there for the winter. Within 24 hours, scores of vehicles bel­onging to Kashmiris were torched. Kashmiri houses were stoned. Loud marches were organised, where anti-Kashmiri slogans resounded in the streets. Thousands of Muslim Kashmiris had to find shelter in mosques and Kashmiri neighbourhoods for safety. Kashmiri state government emp­loyees asked the governor to put safety measures in place, or let them return to Kashmir. Reactions of everyday people tow­ards everyday Kashmiris were no different in the rest of India. Tenants were asked to vacate, professionals were sacked, and shops and goods of merchants vandalised.

The everyday politician of this age, followers of mob-rule, were not far behind. Union minister Jitendra Singh of the BJP, who represents J&K바카라s Udhampur in the Lok Sabha, fuelled local anti-Kashmiri sentiment further by publicly accusing Kashmiri 바카라mainstream바카라 political parties of being 바카라apologetic바카라 in condemning the bombing. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley promised 바카라incontrovertible evidence바카라 of Pak­istan바카라s involvement and pledged 바카라to ensure complete isolation (of Pakistan) from the ­international community바카라. Case closed.

There are voices, of course, that urge caution. But in this age of populist authoritarianism, they are simplistically categorised as anti-national and unheard. Lost in all the noise and silenced in its wake is any discourse on how South Asia reached this point and, more critically, what we are to do about it. All that is heard is demonisation of Kashmiris and calls for 바카라crushing바카라 Pakistan.

Statements of some senior BJP politicians serve to add a layer of tolerance of military indiscipline, not unknown in Kashmir. Laws such as the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act already do this, of course. But the extrajudicial statements of politicians embolden soldiers. The difference between empowering and emboldening is that empowering provides 바카라legal바카라 legitimacy, whereas emboldening, whether civilian mobs and armed soldier, provides 바카라moral바카라 legitimacy. Both need to be rolled back if India is to retain its credibility as a democracy. The faultline between the Modi-Shah-Doval hardline and the Rajnath Singh more-open-to-dialogue approach could be a starting point.

The second 바카라to do바카라 item for the government of India is to have in place a structure for responses to events like Pulwama that ensure sober decision-making rather than personal emotion and off-the-cuff statements. As former foreign secretary Shyam Saran points out, PM Narendra Modi바카라s 바카라free hand to the armed forces바카라 exposes a lack of understanding of the relationship between the military command and the civilian government in a democracy. This abs­ence in the 바카라world바카라s largest democracy바카라 is worrisome and explains in part the all-India anti-Kashmiri actions.

At the risk of sounding clichéd, even trite, the importance of initiating a dialogue on the Kashmir conflict is as critical as its absence is dangerous. To say dialogue is different from saying 바카라talks바카라. Dialogue implies not just 바카라jaw jaw바카라, but listening to the rival바카라s politics바카라to the 바카라other바카라 in the J&K dispute, who challenge India바카라s sovereignty and even Delhi바카라s sibling nemesis, Islamabad. Unless such an understanding of 바카라talks바카라, negotiations or dialogue is integrated into one바카라s perspective, there will be no resolution, no reconciliation and no peace in South Asia.

Then there is the challenge of the next big event in South Asian politics바카라the Indian parliamentary elections around the corner. The BJP바카라s well-known tactic of polarising and then exploiting it for electoral gain has the region on edge. Especially worrisome is the cynical rationale of lip-service to the strategic admission to the international community that 바카라war is not the solution바카라 even while tactically whipping up domestic emotions to win seats. The Indian electorate must know there is such a thing as being too late to retrieve sanity in the games some politicians play!

Are Kashmiris really alienated from India? That is a frequent question asked in parlour conversations on politics. Given the reactions in large swathes of mainland India against Kashmiris last week, the answer should be obvious. Yes. Even then, the outpouring of anger, dislike and loathing against them has startled Kashmir. Is it hate? And will Kashmiris hate back in turn?

One prays not. Quite apart from the passions, hostilities and violence conjured by it, hate corrodes the vessel that vehicles it.

(The writer is a scholar of Central Asian and Tibetan political history and former vice-chancellor of Islamic University of Science and Technology, Kashmir. The views expressed are personal.)

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