When a flamboyant and seasoned leader seeks vote from a conservative organisation, the political desperation seems obvious바카라however strong the denial comes. As two parliamentary byelections in his native Jammu and Kashmir draw close, senior politician Farooq Abdullah is increasingly invoking Islamic sentiments in a bid to woo the Jamaat-e-Islami that his iconic father so famously detested all his life.
Six months short of turning 81, this could well be Dr Abdullah바카라s last poll battle, observers believe. The former union minister, who headed the troubled border state five times, is contesting as the candidate of his National Conference party in native Srinagar that goes to polls on April 9. Three days later is a byelection in Anantnag, also in the Valley.
Dr Abdullah바카라s electoral opponent is far less known: Nazir Ahmad Khan of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) ruling the state. That has not stopped the NC veteran, whose party is in alliance with the Congress, from wooing the Jamaat in a way, commentators say, is bringing back a political recluse to the mainstream of society. More so, when the contestant바카라s father, late chief minister Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah who founded the NC in 1932, had been a harsh critic of the Islamist outfit that has today lost much of its public clout.
The Abdullahs바카라Dr Farooq and his ex-CM son Omar바카라have been calling this bypoll as an 바카라ideological struggle바카라, raising the campaign pitch. In an April 3 speech, Dr Abdullah asked people not to forget a crusade of justice Prophet Moses waged against Pharaoh and his armies. 바카라Truth, justice and honesty will always tide over suppression, brute force and tyranny,바카라 he said with reference to the prophet-messenger in the Quran. This plea for support of 바카라our brothers in the Jamaat바카라 was made before an audience in north Kashmir바카라s Kangan바카라an assembly seat that has remained with the NC for the past half a century.
The scene contrasts with the party바카라s pertinent stance just three years ago. In 2014, NC leader Mustafa Kamal, younger brother of Dr Abdullah, dubbed the Jamaat as 바카라another face of the PDP바카라. The 1999-founded party, he alleged, had been enjoying electoral support from the socio-religious organisation that was always at war with the NC ideology.
The Jamaat is seen as having one percent vote-base in the Valley. If so, why side with the outfit that has not contested elections since armed insurgency erupted in the Valley in 1989? It is part of a renewed war against the Hindu right wing led by the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), claims Dr Abdullah. 바카라We have to come together to fight the RSS, lest our identity and honour will be wiped out,바카라 he cautions, calling out the Jamaat. 바카라I am just one person, but I seek your support so that we can all collectively fight against the RSS with courage.바카라 Abdullah brings the recent Uttar Pradesh assembly polls to buttress his argument that his electoral contest is a fight for Muslim identity to which the Jamaat ought to be a party.
The BJP, which is in J&K a coalition partner of the PDP led by CM Mehbooba Mufti, did not field a single Muslim candidate in UP that has four crore Muslims, Dr Abdullah reiterates. 바카라The day is not far when god will teach a lesson to those who have sold their conscience to remain in power and for harassing as well as humiliating people for their own self-seeking ambitions,바카라 he adds.
The Jamaat says Dr Abdullah바카라s statements are of no significance. 바카라He, like other pro-India parties, has been responsible for suffering and miseries of Kashmir,바카라 Zahid Ali, the organisation바카라s spokesman, tells Outlook.
The NC chief, by raising the spectre of the RSS in the upcoming bypolls, is trying to do what the PDP did during its 2014 J&K assembly poll campaign. That time the party, led by Mehbooba바카라s father Mufti Mohammad Sayeed (1936-2016), called itself as the only alternative to stop the BJP바카라s 바카라onslaught바카라, only to form a post-poll alliance with the saffron party and rule the state. Today, Dr Abdullah, while looking out for the Jamaat바카라s support, hopes that his appeal would be seen as a larger battle for 바카라our very survival with dignity and honour바카라바카라beyond being an electoral fight between two alliances in the state.
All of it when the Jamaat is headed by a moderate. Peacenik Ghulam Mohammad Bhat, who now heads the organisation for a fourth time, is credited with overturning the 1941-founded Jamaat바카라s hard-line policy on Kashmir. A native of Sopore in northwest Kashmir바카라s Baramulla district, he first occupied the post in 1985바카라and is known mainly for delinking the Jamaat바카라s association with the region바카라s militant outfits. The Jamaat, which used to call for solution of the Kashmir issue according to the UN resolutions and had favoured accession with Pakistan, currently focuses on socio-educational work rather than engaging in political issues.
If Dr Abdullah is now trying to motivate the Jamaat to change its low profile it has gone into since 1998, the NC leader바카라s language is바카라ironically바카라in sync with the PDP when it was in the Opposition. Yet, his open warmth for the Jamaat has surprised many, including the ruling party바카라s Naeem Akhtar, who is a government spokesman. 바카라Dr Abdullah has been too long at the helm of J&K affairs and in the driving seat of the state바카라s mainstream politics to indulge in this kind of a discourse,바카라 he tells Outlook. 바카라He has aligned with every party in the country바카라from the BJP and Congress to I.K. Gujral to H.D. Deve Gowda. How can what is halal (permissible under Islam) for him in politics be taboo for others,바카라 wonders Akhtar, in reaction to Dr Abdullah바카라s criticism of the PDP allying with the BJP.
The two Lok Sabha seats of Kashmir region fell vacant following the resignation of Mehbooba from Anantnag after she got elected to the state assembly in June last year and, later, on September 15, senior PDP leader Tariq Hamid Karra quit the Srinagar seat in protest against government forces killing civilians protesting the July 8 shooting down of young militant Burhan Wani. The PDP바카라s Anantnag candidate is Mufti Tassaduq, who is the CM바카라s 45-year-old brother. He faces the NC-Congress combine바카라s Ghulam Ahmad Mir, 58.
The NC바카라s open support to the Jamaat, which allegedly has a covert understanding with the PDP, has made the organisation a new power centre in Kashmir. The Jamaat 바카라seriously suffered바카라 in 1979 when Pakistan PM Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was hanged by the then military chief Zia-ul-Haq, according to political commentator Zahid Ghulam Mohammad. 바카라Those days, we had an NC government in the state바카라and villages with Jamaat supporters, especially in south Kashmir, were burnt; their orchids destroyed. That forced the organisation to alter it political course.바카라 Now if the NC and PDP are fighting for Jamaat support, it only shows how the two parties have shrunk and the Jamaat has grown, he adds.
Academician Siddiq Wahid finds any party바카라s bid to warm up to a faith-based entity as a sign of opportunism.
The Jamaat바카라s electoral entry was in 1972, when Sheikh Abdullah was in jail. It won five seats, but couldn바카라t repeat such a show in the 87-member assembly. In 1977, when the Jan Sangh was an ally of Islamist parties in J&K, the Jamaat secured just one of the 19 seats it contested with 3.6 per cent vote-share.
It was in 1998 that Bhat delinked Jamaat with armed insurgency that had gripped the state since 1989 under the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen. The move was a fallout of pro-government Ikhwan-ul-Muslimun militia바카라s pan-Valley killing of a large number of workers of the Jamaat, which was perceived as a political force of the Hizb. Two years later, by the turn of the century, Bhat succeeded in leading the Jamaat for a second term by defeating Ashraf Sehrai, a close aide of hardline separatist leader Syed Ali Geelani. Soon, in August 2000, Bhat endorsed a brief unilateral ceasefire the Hizb had announced. Three years thence, Nazir Ahmad Kashani replaced Bhat after he completed his term. In 2004, Geelani parted ways with the Jamaat and formed the Tehreek-e-Hurriyat.
Then, in 2008, the Jamaat took a stand that contrasted with that of the separatists and Geelani. Sheikh Ghulam Hassan, who that time headed the organisation, stated that elections do not have any impact on the Kashmir issue. Hassan, thus, became the first leader in the Valley to delink polls and the vexed territorial conflict between India and Pakistan.
By Naseer Ganai in Srinagar